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NASA file
image shows Apollo 11 U.S. astronaut Buzz Aldrin standing on the
Moon, next to
the Lunar
Module "Eagle" (R),
July 20,
1969.
(REUTERS/Neil
Armstrong-NASA/Handout) |
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When
man achieved the impossible...:
The grainy footage still makes me gasp with astonishment. The famous
black-and-white images of a spindly lunar module setting down on the
Moon on July 20th, 1969, represent the improbable trajectory from
dream to the reality that ....
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New Delhi:
One night, 40 years ago, a 12-year-old boy in Peru watched on
a black and white television screen grainy, yet riveting, images of
a man planting the first human footprints on another world.
Minutes after he had watched the
images of Neil Armstrong walk on the moon, Pedro Medelius, a native
of Lima, told his parents that when he grew up, he would like to be
a scientist at Nasa.
Medelius today recalled the incident
and his parents’ words — “well, you’ll have to work very hard to get
there”.
“They did not appear convinced, but
they were supportive,” he said in an interview to The Telegraph.
He studied electrical engineering in
Peru and in the University of Florida, and joined the Nasa Kennedy
Space Centre at Cape Canaveral in 1991 where he joined a team of
engineers working on the electronics of the Space Shuttle.
On Monday, the 40th anniversary of the
Apollo 11 landing, Medelius will be at work, but expects a ceremony.
There will also be a celebration at
home — his daughter, Marie, who was born on the 25th anniversary of
the Apollo 11 landing — turns 15 this Monday.
The Apollo missions have thrown up
myriad technology spinoffs — from ready-to-eat, freeze-dried foods
to athletic shoes, from water purification systems to special
insulating materials used in homes and industries.
But in addition to spawning such
tangible, quantifiable technology offshoots, the first human stroll
on the moon also appears to have inspired a generation of youngsters
to pursue careers in science and engineering.
“The excitement that human space
flight generates is as important as technology spinoffs,” Medelius,
who has received a prestigious Nasa Silver Snoopy Award for service
to the Space Shuttle astronauts, said over phone.
“Kids need to get excited about
science — in the long run, this benefits all of society,” said
Medelius who was commended in October 1996 for “highly imaginative
engineering” that helped improve space shuttle safety and reduced
operating costs.
An online survey of about 800
scientists worldwide who have published research papers in the
journal Nature over the past three years has revealed that
half of them had been drawn to science by the Apollo missions.
High school students who watched the
Apollo missions veered not just towards astronomy or planetary
sciences but even towards life sciences and — like Medelius in Peru
— engineering.
“I am sure (the landing) played an
important role in driving me into electronic space business that I
manage today at Texas Instruments,” said semiconductor expert James
Salzmann, inscribing his thoughts on a special webpage containing
recollections of the Apollo 11 landing created by Space Foundation,
a US-based, non-profit organisation.
The Nature survey results published on
Friday show that 90 per cent of the scientists believe human
spaceflight has prompted technological innovations.
The Apollo missions have produced
spinoffs that have made their way into everyday life -- lightweight
water purifiers based on silver ions, and a super-durable athletic
shoe where the foam was dumped in favour of a fatigue-resistant
mechanical system.
The challenge of packing enough
nutritious food into the cramped living quarters of the Apollo
spacecraft spurred the development of freeze-dried foods that
preserve the nutritional value and taste but are lightweight and
have a long shelf life.
Two Indian laboratories -- the Central
Food and Technology Research Institute and the Defence Food Research
Laboratory -- independently developed this technology during the
1980s for subcontinental dishes -- dal to biryanis to chicken
chettinad.
(The Telegraph)
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