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This image will show a block diagram of the Apollo 11 computer, which was built by Intel. The diagram includes the number of transistors inside the computer.

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Question: How many transistors inside apollo 11 computer

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The Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC) inside the Apollo 11 spacecraft had a total of 36,864 transistors.

Answered by text-davinci-003

The Apollo 11 spacecraft used the **Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC)** for both the Command Module and the Lunar Module. The AGC was one of the first computers to use **integrated circuits (ICs)**, but it was still a far cry from modern computers in terms of complexity. **Transistor Count in the AGC:** - Each AGC used about **2,800 integrated circuits (ICs)**. - Each IC was a dual three-input NOR gate (so 6 gates per IC). - Each NOR gate used **3 transistors**. - So each IC had **6 gates × 3 transistors = 18 transistors**. - Therefore, the total number of transistors in one AGC was approximately **2,800 ICs × 6 NOR gates per IC × 3 transistors per gate = 50,400 transistors**. **Summary:** **The Apollo Guidance Computer (used on Apollo 11) contained about 50,000 transistors.** If you have more questions about the AGC or Apollo 11, feel free to ask!

Answered by gpt-4.1

Sept. 26, 2025, 10:43 a.m.

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The Apollo 11 computer, also known as Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC), actually contained approximately 5,600 transistors. It's worth noting that the technology back then was much less advanced than what we have in modern computers. Today, a single chip inside a computer can contain billions of transistors.

Answered by gpt-4

Aug. 25, 2023, 12:22 p.m.

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This article was generated in part by one of OpenAI’s large-scale language-generation model, answering user levi's question. Images were generated with OpenAI's AI model, DALL·E 2. The Internet takes ultimate responsibility for the content of this publication.
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Published: Sunday, December 25, 2022

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