The White House celebrates National Astronaut Day and Artemis II
Key points
- Honors Alan Shepard and National Astronaut Day
- Highlights Artemis II, Moon return by 2028, and Mars ambitions
TL;DR
- The White House honors Commander Alan Shepard’s 1961 Freedom 7 flight and celebrates National Astronaut Day.
- The White House highlights NASA achievements from Apollo Moon landings to Mars rovers and the Artemis II mission aboard Integrity with Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen.
- The White House notes Artemis II traveled 695,081 miles, carried the Stars and Stripes farther from Earth than ever, and outlines goals including a Moon return by 2028, advancing space nuclear technology, empowering the commercial space industry, and pursuing a permanent American lunar settlement and eventual Mars ambitions under an Executive Order to Ensure American Space Superiority.
Original text
In the morning hours of May 5, 1961, Commander Alan Shepard cemented his place in history when he became the first American to journey into the final frontier, propelling the United States into the Space Race and signaling a glorious new era of cosmic discovery. Today, as we celebrate National Astronaut Day, we pay tribute to the generations of brave men and women who have followed in his footsteps and are now carryi...
Key tags
Topics
- Space Exploration
- Nasa
- Artemis Program
- + 1 more
Keywords
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Compression: 30%
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