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For NASA, It Should Be Mars or Bust
After decades of nostalgia for the Apollo program, it’s time for NASA to send astronauts on a radical new adventure, worthy of America’s pioneering spirit
NASA astronaut Andrew Morgan conducts a space walk in Earth orbit in 2019 to upgrade power systems on the International Space Station. Photo: NASA By David W. Brown Dec. 18, 2020 10:52 am ET
Since the Apollo program ended almost 50 years ago, every newly elected U.S. president has been vexed by the same question: Where next to send astronauts?
NASA’s current target is the moon, but the moon belongs to a previous generation of American pioneers. A grander, more fitting ambition for the space program that first landed human beings on another heavenly body is Mars a destination that NASA has been preparing to reach since the days of its early visionaries. It is now time to realize their dream.
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The Chang’e 5 sample return capsule landed in China’s Inner Mongolia region Wednesday. Credit: CNSA
A capsule containing moon rocks landed in a remote, snow-covered corner of China Wednesday, bringing home the first samples from the lunar surface in 44 years and completing the Chinese space program’s most challenging robotic mission to date.
The return module appeared to have landed intact in China’s Inner Mongolia region, based on images broadcast on Chinese state television and released by the China National Space Administration.