RIP to the First Man on the Moon - Neil Armstrong



Most people have heard or read the name Neil Armstrong because it is being taught in school and being seen in the movie, Apollo 11 (1996). I have watched the movie during our Science class in high school and it's one of the awesome movies I really enjoyed. 

As being confirmed by the news on radio, newspaper, internet and television, the astronaut who first walked on the moon just died. Many people all over the world commemorate how his contribution affects mankind. Upon landing on the moon on July 20, 1969, he proclaimed "That's one small step for [a] man, one giant leap for mankind." More than half a billion people watched the black and white television that showed Armstrong, clad in a white space suit, climb down the lunar module's ladder on to the Moon's desolate surface. His words have since been etched in history.




Neil Alden Armstrong or Neil Armstrong was born on August 5, 1930 in Wapakoneta, Ohio and died 20 days after his 82th birthday in Cincinnati, Ohio due to complications from blocked coronary arteries.

He was an American astronaut, test pilot, aerospace engineer, university professor and United States Naval Aviator. He was the first person to walk on the Moon. Before becoming an astronaut, Armstrong was a United States Navy officer and had served in the Korean War. After the war, he served as a test pilot at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics High-Speed Flight Station, now known as the Dryden Flight Research Center, where he logged over 900 flights. He graduated from Purdue University and the University of Southern California.

A participant in the U.S. Air Force's Man In Space Soonest and X-20 Dyna-Soar human spaceflight programs, Armstrong joined the NASA Astronaut Corps in 1962. His first spaceflight was the NASA Gemini 8 mission in 1966, for which he was the command pilot, becoming one of the first U.S. civilians in space. On this mission, he performed the first manned docking of two spacecraft with pilot David Scott.

Armstrong's second and last spaceflight was as mission commander of the Apollo 11 moon landing in July 1969. On this mission, Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin descended to the lunar surface and spent 2½ hours exploring, while Michael Collins remained in orbit in the Command Module. Armstrong was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Richard Nixon along with Collins and Aldrin, the Congressional Space Medal of Honor by President Jimmy Carter in 1978, and the Congressional Gold Medal in 2009.



R.I.P. Neil Armstrong!
RIP to the First Man on the Moon - Neil Armstrong RIP to the First Man on the Moon - Neil Armstrong Reviewed by Anonymous on August 26, 2012 Rating: 5

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