Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

NASA celebrates 45 years of moon landing

Darpan News Desk IANS, 21 Jul, 2014 07:26 AM
  • NASA celebrates 45 years of moon landing
On July 20, 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to set foot on the moon.
 
Forty-five years later, NASA will celebrate Monday the giant leap by honouring Armstrong, who died in 2012, with a renaming ceremony of the historic “operations and checkout building” at Cape Canaveral in Florida, the launch site.
 
Both Aldrin and Michael Collins, the Apollo 11 command module pilot who orbited the moon, will be there.
 
“It was 45 years ago that Neil Armstrong took the small step onto the surface of the moon that changed the course of history. The years that followed saw a space age of scientific, technological and human research on which we have built the modern era,” NASA said in a statement.
 
The Apollo missions blazed a path for human exploration to the moon and today, we are extending that path to near-Earth asteroids, Mars and beyond, it added.
 
To send humans to deep space, NASA engineers are developing a new space transportation capability destined to travel far beyond Earth.
 
The Orion spacecraft and Space Launch System (SLS) heavy-lift rocket will be the most advanced space vehicles ever built.
 
“Around 2019, we will launch a robotic mission to rendezvous with a near-Earth asteroid. The spacecraft will either capture an asteroid or retrieve a boulder off of a much larger asteroid and then redirect the asteroid mass to a stable orbit around the moon,” the US apace agency said.
 
In the mid 2020s, astronauts aboard the Orion spacecraft, launched by SLS, will explore that asteroid and return to Earth with samples.
 
In December 2014, NASA is set to conduct the first test flight of Orion. 
 
In 2015, the “New Horizons” mission will fly by Pluto and see the icy world up close for the first time.
 
“In 2020, we will send a new rover to Mars, to follow in the footsteps of Curiosity, search for evidence of life and pave the way for future human explorers,” NASA announced.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

Google Camera app for Android devices is here

Google Camera app for Android devices is here
This camera is really cool. Although Google's Nexus smart phones do not come on top of your mind when you think of buying one, this all new camera app may force you to reconsider your plan.

Google Camera app for Android devices is here

Google Glass to assist surgeons soon

Google Glass to assist surgeons soon
The eyewear device Google Glass can be a useful tool in surgical settings, a promising research reveals.

Google Glass to assist surgeons soon

Sea deposits to build your smart phone!

Sea deposits to build your smart phone!

Did you ever think the smart phone you are holding in your hands is made of some rare, scarce ear...

Sea deposits to build your smart phone!

Opinion: Trash is not ugly

Opinion: Trash is not ugly
How would it look if the worn out motherboard of a computer becomes your coaster or the headlight of a bike turns into your desk lamp or tyre tube used as a wallet and the door of an old refrigerator as the centre table of your room? This is not wild imagination but creative ways of using scrap and making it look chic.

Opinion: Trash is not ugly

Why Young techies are leaving Infosys in droves

Why Young techies are leaving Infosys in droves
The return of co-founder N.R. Narayana Murthy from retirement as executive chairman June 1, 2013 notwithstanding, a whopping 36,268 software engineers at medium and lateral levels left the IT bellwether during the last 12 months.

Why Young techies are leaving Infosys in droves

Get ready for smaller, better hard drives

Get ready for smaller, better hard drives
The hard drives in your computer could get even smaller as scientists have now discovered a novel technique to understand better the new properties that arise when two materials are put together.

Get ready for smaller, better hard drives