Sunday, July 21, 2019

Astronauts explain why Armstrong was chosen to walk on the moon's surface first

July 20, 2019, is the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing on the moon when the American astronaut Neil Armstrong became the first person to leave the moon on the moon. After 20 minutes, Buzz Aldrin followed up.

Astronaut Neil Armstrong in Apollo 11, July 20, 1969 (NASA image)
Most people assume that NASA planned Armstrong to become the first person to land on the moon because of its elderly couples. Armstrong is the commander of Apollo 11, and Aldrin is Pilgrimage Street, while Michael Collins is the one Orbital Direction. In celebrating the 45th anniversary of the moon's first human moon, Al-Alam al On the 11th Apollo with Armstrong described this as a rare case of NASA that the Anchor Walked on the Moon First.

Pilot Buzz Aldrin

In such instances, young astronauts like Alvin are often required to walk in space and leave the body more mature to watch. Responsible in the spacecraft, because in an emergency, he could better manage the situation in the vehicle than the young pilots. "All previous missions, if traveling in the spacewalk, must be young astronauts, not commander-in-chief Take care of the craft. Al-Ain recalls.

From left to right: Pilot Buzz Aldrin, Commander Neil Armstrong, and Michael Collins Orbiter Line

NASA said the first idea was that Aldine was required to walk on the first moon, but when the spacecraft Docking on the moon, the craft does not open, the aluminum cover is seated. That's why it became the first person to walk the moon and 20 minutes later, Al Aden Followed by Collins as the controller in the vehicle.

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