HomeNewsWorldApollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins returns to launch site on 50th anniversary

Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins returns to launch site on 50th anniversary

In the iconic 1969 moon mission, Collins, 88, stayed in lunar orbit while his crew mates Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin stepped foot on the lunar surface, an event that enraptured Americans and marked a preeminent chapter in human spaceflight.

July 17, 2019 / 15:43 IST
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Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins returned to the launch pad on July 16 at NASA's Kennedy Space Centre in Florida where he flew to the moon 50 years ago along with the late Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin.

“Wonderful feeling to be back at launch pad 39A,” Collins, the command module pilot for Apollo 11, said in an interview on the pad with Kennedy Space Center Director Bob Cabana, himself a veteran of four space shuttle launches and a former shuttle commander.

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In the iconic 1969 moon mission, Collins, 88, stayed in lunar orbit while his crew mates Armstrong and Aldrin stepped foot on the lunar surface, an event that enraptured Americans and marked a preeminent chapter in human spaceflight.

Aldrin, 89, was to join Collins on the launch pad but cancelled. Armstrong died in 2012 at the age of 82.