We are going to the moon, but this time, a woman will walk on the surface
Washington, June 15: As NASA plans to take humans to the moon by 2024 after the end of the Apollo program, it has now given give the chance to the first female to walk on the surface of the moon. So who is it? Who will take the giant leap for womankind?
The Artemis program, unveiled by NASA in mid-May, aims to put astronauts on the lunar surface in 2024 - and give us the first female moonwalker. The mission foresees a four-member crew, two of whom will walk the Moon.
The initiative comes as the nation prepares to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing in 1969, which made Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin the first people to set foot on another world.
So, who will she be? No one knows for sure, but it's a likely bet the candidate will be selected from among NASA's current roster of 12 female astronauts.
NASA set up a webcam so you can watch of Mars 2020 rover in making
They're aged between 40 and 53, and are former military pilots, medical doctors and scientists who were picked from among thousands of applicants since the late 1990s.
When
was
the
last
time?
The
last
time
humans
left
low
Earth
orbit
was
1972,
when
the
last
Apollo
astronauts
returned
from
the
moon.
After that, political interest in sending humans into deep space waned, and funding for such missions dried up. So NASA turned to projects in Earth's orbit, notably the space shuttle and the International Space Station.