command module on display (2010) '' on display (2006) space capsule on display on display (2013) on display (2008)
Glamorous Glennis, used in the 1983 film
The Right Stuff Flown items included in the Cosmosphere's collection are a
Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird, the
Liberty Bell 7 Mercury spacecraft, the
Gemini 10 space capsule, and the
Command Module Odyssey from
Apollo 13. Additionally, authentic
Redstone and
Titan II launch vehicles used in the Mercury and Gemini programs flank the building's exterior. A prized item on display is a
Moon rock from
Apollo 11, the first crewed mission to land on the Moon. Every artifact on display at the Cosmosphere is either an actual flown artifact, a "flight-ready backup" (identical to the item actually flown), an engineering model, or a historically accurate replica. The Cosmosphere museum begins with the earliest experiments in rocketry during the
World War II era, explores through the
Space Race and
Cold War, and continues through modern times with the
Space Shuttle and
International Space Station, as well as
SpaceShipOne and
commercial spaceflight. Subset of notable items on display:
Germany :;World War II era :*
V-1 flying bomb missile (authentic, restored) :*
V-2 rocket (authentic, restored) :*
Walter HWK 109-509 rocket engine from a
Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet :;Cold War era :* Section of the
Berlin Wall – last section removed (authentic)
Russia / Soviet Union / USSR :;Early satellites :*
Sputnik 1 (flight-ready backup) :*
Sputnik 2 (engineering model) :;Early space programs :*
Vostok space capsule (competitor against Mercury program) :*
Voskhod 2 space capsule (competitor against the Gemini program) :;Space program joint venture with the United States :*
Apollo–Soyuz Test Project Craft (full-scale replica) :;Various space articles :* Prototype and flown Russian
space suits :*
RD-107 engine, used on the
Soyuz rocket United States :;Winged aircraft :*
Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird reconnaissance plane (flown) :*
Northrop T-38 Talon supersonic jet trainer in
NASA livery (flown) :*
XLR11 and
XLR99 rocket engines from the
North American X-15 program (flown) :* Replica of the
Bell X-1 Glamorous Glennis, used in the filming of
The Right Stuff movie :* Engine from
Bell X-1 Glamorous Glennis, pilot
Chuck Yeager (flown) :;Early satellites :*
Explorer 1 satellite (replica) :*
Vanguard 1 satellite (flight-ready backup) :;
Mercury space program :*
Liberty Bell 7 Mercury spacecraft, recovered from the bottom of the
Atlantic Ocean. It is the only spacecraft flown by NASA but owned by an entity other than
NASA or the
Smithsonian (owned by Cosmosphere). :*
Mercury-Redstone Launch Vehicle rocket (authentic, standing vertical outdoors) :;
Gemini space program :*
Gemini 10 space capsule (flown) :*
Agena target vehicle docking collar (authentic) :*
Titan II rocket used in the Gemini program (authentic, standing vertically outdoors) :;
Apollo space program :*
Apollo 13 command module
Odyssey (flown) :*
Lunar Roving Vehicle (full-scale replica) :*
Lunar Module and surface experiment suite (full-scale replica) :* Apollo
White Room (authentic) :* Moon rock collected during
Apollo 11 :* Multiple cameras and items carried on Apollo flights (flown) :*
Rocketdyne F-1 engine components recovered from the ocean (flown), unused engine outdoors :;
Space Shuttle space program :* Full-scale replica of
Space Shuttle Endeavour (left side only) :* Piece of tile from the
Space Shuttle Columbia disaster (flown) :;Various space articles :* Prototype and flown American
space suits :*
RL10,
H-1,
F-1,
Merlin 1D rocket engines ==Controversy==