Hard to believe that 40 years ago man's first steps on the moon happened. And just a few lunar missions and a few chosen men have had the privilege to walk on a different planet. 40 years later, we really haven't done much in the way of space exploration. Funding for the lunar missions died out. And the best that we've got now is a taxi service to a multi-billion dollar lab in low earth orbit. Its been about 37 years since we've been to the moon. Almost like, "Been there, done that. Next!"
I don't know what the future of space exploration will be. Congress will probably trash the next rocket series and scuttle any further projects to the moon. In all reality, the Chinese will probably be the next humans up there. Maybe they'll outsource some of their space and science projects to some hungry American scientists. But then again, maybe not. Countries learn by doing it themselves than letting someone else do it for them. That is how America became so great.
I have two wishes/dreams in my life. 1.) I wish I was old enough to remember the Apollo 11 and 13 space missions. But I was too young. I barely remember one, maybe two Apollo missions. 2.) I wish I could have been one of the 12 astronauts that walked on the surface of the moon. What an utter thrill that would have been. I would have taken a bazillion photos and stored as much moon rock and dirt as I could physically handle.
Hats off to NASA for the major accomplishment they made 40 years ago. My Garmin Forerunner 50 has more computing power than all the space vehicles put together. And hats off to the all the astronauts that had the guts to strap themselves on top of a 363 foot rocket with nearly 6+ million pounds of propellant hooked on to their back sides. You can't say you wouldn't be a little worried if you had 5 million pounds of kerosene below you waiting to blow you to little tiny bits. (5 million pounds of kerosene is approximately 625,000 gallons. If you ran that in a diesel car that got 40 miles to the gallon, you would be able to travel 25,000,000 miles with that much fuel...... Instead, it was all burned up in about 168 seconds to travel a total distance of about 72 miles. That's about 0.0001152 miles to a gallon..... :-D )
1 comment:
Ah, my being a year older helps here.
I DO recall July 20, 1969. I was 4. Mostly I was irritated because no cartoons had been on that day; everything was pre-empted by shots of a rocket in space (which is pretty dull after about 5 minutes when you're four). I do remember that I thought how the astronauts bounced around on the moon was pretty spiffy.
I'm surprised you don't recall later moonlandings, though. You would've been 6 for at least one of them. I was a "mature" 2nd grader and space stuff was very in vogue. We drank Tang, ate "foodsticks," and watched lots and lots of space-related stuff on TV and on films for class. Even Snoopy from Peanuts was pictured as an astronaut.
But I still thought the rocket in space parts were pretty dull when they went on and on for hours.
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