When the curtain suddenly fell on America's lunar missions after 1972
New York, July 20, 2021
At one time the moon or cross variables were considered the imagination of poets and writers. Which was realized by black-headed white humans. The solar system has the closest relationship with the Moon closest to the Earth. There is hardly a planet that man has thought and imagined about the moon. On July 20, 1952, 52 years ago, a man living on the earth set foot on the moon and returned to the earth on July 8. The landing of astronauts Neil Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins on the moon was the proudest moment in human history.
After the Apollo mission-11, the United States sent five other missions to the moon. In 1972, Eugene Sernan was the last astronaut to reach the moon. The United States has since unveiled a lunar mission. The mystery of why no one has been to the moon since has been unveiled. If America had gone ahead with its original plan so far, human settlement could have been established on the moon.
In 2004, then-US President George W. Bush passed a proposal to send a man to the moon, allocating a budget of 72 7.288 billion, but the project could not begin. In 2017, US President Donald Trump approved the re-launch of the US lunar mission. According to the information received, NASA is currently focusing on the project to find Jupiter, Mars, galaxies and new satellites.
NASA does not seem to have any special research on the moon compared to the cost behind the same lunar mission. Cheap technology and low-cost spacecraft that can go to the moon need to be built. Yet NASA plans to send humans to the moon by 2028. According to the plan, the four astronauts will return to Earth after spending seven days on the moon. Before that, two unmanned spacecraft will be sent to the moon for experimentation in 2024 and 2026. The mission plan will be different from Apollo 11. Thus, 60 years after the Apollo 11 mission, America is preparing to send a man to the moon.
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