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Science

How Apollo 11 brought humanity together

How Apollo 11 brought humanity together
Newsexplored
20th July 2019
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EagleImage copyright NASA-VRS/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Image caption The Moon landing was born out of conflict but for a moment in time brought the world together

As if illuminated by a divine light, the Saturn V rocket shimmered on Launch pad 39A at Cape Canaveral.

Emblazoned with the stars and stripes and cloaked by the gold and crimson of the dawn’s early light, it appeared as American as the nation’s anthem.

In their space suits, three astronauts set out on a mission that would propel them and all humanity into a new era.

An endeavour which was born out of conflict ended by bringing the entire world together, at least for a moment.

Image copyright SPUTNIK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Image caption Yuri Gagarin: the first man in space was from the Soviet Union.

The space race to the Moon began on October 4, 1957 when the Soviet Union sent the first artificial satellite into orbit around Earth. Sputnik 1’s impassionate beeps spread terror throughout the US.

There were fears that America’s cold war foe would soon be able to drop atom bombs from space.

Existential threat

As the Soviets sent the first astronaut into space, completed the first crewed orbit and the first spacewalk, the US Administration feared that the Communist Bloc’s technological superiority would be seen as a demonstration of its ideological pre-eminence.

America faced a threat to its very way of life.

Image copyright SPL
Image caption President John F Kennedy: “we choose to go to the Moon and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.”

In 1961, President John F Kennedy responded by announcing his plans to send astronauts to the Moon. A year later, at Rice University, shining and virile as the Sun god the space programme was to be named after, President Kennedy galvanised his nation.

“We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too”.

Just seven years later, Commander Neil Armstrong Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin and Mike Collins were on their way to the Moon.

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Apollo 11 roared into the air, rising beautifully into the sky on a perfect summers’ day.

Image copyright NASA/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Image caption Neil Armstrong: Apollo 11 commander and irst man on the Moon

Once safely in orbit, Buzz Aldrin, used an early colour video camera to film a pastel blue Earth rapidly receding through the spacecraft window.

Turning the camera in towards the crew area we see a joyful Neil Armstrong turning upside down in the weightlessness he found himself in.

Four days later and the astronauts had arrived for the riskiest part of the mission


Dangerous boulders

With fuel running low an on board computer problems Neil Armstrong took manual control of lunar lander, Eagle, calmly steering it away from dangerous boulders.

Buzz Aldrin then spoke the first words spoken by a person on another world.

“Contact light. OK, engine stop…”

Armstrong confirmed what an anxious mission control had wanted to hear:

“Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed.”

Whatever the time zone, people all across the world watched in awe. Six hundred million followed the dark, indistinct pictures live on TV.

In the UK, sleeping children were woken to see Neil Armstrong emerge from the Lunar Module in the early hours of the morning. After what seemed an age, he stepped on to the lunar surface, uttering the words that would reverberate through history forever more.

“One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind”.

The astronauts planted America’s flag, but as Neil Armstrong read from a plaque he placed on the lunar surface it clear that it was an achievement for all humanity

“We came in peace for all mankind.”

It was a sentiment expressed by President Richard Nixon as he spoke to the crew of Apollo 11 from the Oval office of the White House.

Image copyright NASA/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Image caption Earthrise from the lunar surface: a view that moved the astronauts and transformed humanity

“For one priceless moment in the whole history of man, all the people on this Earth are truly one: one in their pride in what you have done, and one in our prayers that you will return safely to Earth”.

But unlike Kennedy, President Nixon was no golden Apollo and the world quickly forgot. TV audiences became bored with the Moon landings and the Apollo programme was scrapped, with the final launch in 1972.

At the time President Nixon was making plans to begin a Christmas mass bombing campaign of North Vietnam and his administration was involved in a break in of the Democratic National Committee’s offices in the Watergate complex. The US was still riven with conflict and protest.

Darkness returned

The final Apollo mission was the first night launch of the powerful Saturn V rocket. As if mirroring the ten years of the Apollo era in a few short minutes, night turned to day as the fire from the Saturn V’s powerful F1 engines bathed Cape Canaveral with a glorious ethereal light. Then, as Apollo 17 surged upward like a fiery angel, the main engines fell back to Earth and the darkness returned.

Image copyright CCI ARCHIVES/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Image caption President Nixon welcoming the Apollo 11 astronauts to the USS Hornet, 24 July 1969. The astronauts are confined in a Mobile Quarantine Unit

The Apollo era was a time when all things seemed possible. The very stars seemed within our grasp.

Space historian, Professor Chris Riley of Brunel University believes that that the Moon landing made a cultural transformation to our species that will stay with us.

In his book, Where We Once Stood about the Apollo missions for older children and teenagers he says that the spirit of Apollo is as relevant now as it ever was.

“It is endlessly inspiring for what humanity can do when we have to rise to a single impressive challenge. Right now stopping the worst excesses of climate change seems utterly impossible. There are options to solve it scientifically but it requires a concerted global effort. And the message of Apollo is that is totally achievable”

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20th July 2019
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