...it, irrelevant. There are now 7.7 billion of us; when Neil Armstrong viewed us all from the Moon it was 3.6 billion; and... tourism is an opportunity to embrace Fifty years ago, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the Moon. To get them there...
... HAWC+ instrument (a far-infrared camera and imaging polarimeter) in front of the SOFIA aircraft in the hangar at NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center. The instrument is designed to allow total and polarised flux imaging in five broad bands...
...small step for [a] man, one giant leap for mankind.” Neil Armstrong’s words, spoken on 21 July 1969 from the Sea of ... placing the Sun at the centre of our universe. Common heritage Armstrong’s words now reflect those of René Dubos, widely taken up by...
... subject is of interest is to consider the question of those first historic footprints on an alien world, made in the lunar dust by Armstrong and Aldrin. If no-one returns to the Moon, they will remain there forever, but what is likely to happen...
...learn. Take, for example, a single quote from Armstrong on ‘landing abort rules’: following a long debate about insufficient data during... the landing phase, Armstrong shook his head, saying, “You must think I’m ...
... a number of ‘bitesize’ boxes on crew members and specific technologies. There is even a double-page spread on “The missing A” in Armstrong’s famous speech (one small step for [a] man) based on analyses of the audio waveform from the original...