News Release

Fifty years after Apollo: When will we go back to the Moon?

New book explores why there have been no human missions to the Moon since 1972

Book Announcement

Springer

Returning People to the Moon After Apollo

image: Returning People to the Moon After Apollo: Former Apollo engineer Pat Norris gives a detailed account of the Apollo missions and of the Soviet program that was the other competitor in the race to the Moon, and asks why more people have not landed on the Moon in the decades since. He also assesses today's programs and weighs up who will likely be the next to walk on the Moon and when. view more 

Credit: Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2019

Fifty years ago, Neil Armstrong's famous first steps on the surface of the Moon demonstrated both ground-breaking technical expertise and immense political will. Science and technology have made considerable progress since then, so why was the last manned mission to the Moon in 1972? In his new book, Returning People to the Moon After Apollo, former Apollo engineer Pat Norris gives a detailed account of the Apollo missions and of the Soviet program that was the other competitor in the race to the Moon, and asks why more people have not landed on the Moon in the decades since. He also assesses today's programs and weighs up who will likely be the next to walk on the Moon and when.

In the opening chapters, Norris outlines in detail why the US decided to embark on a mission to send humans to the Moon in the first place. He then goes on to describe the technical and managerial advances necessary to send humans there, and gives a detailed account of the first Moon landing using supporting photographs and diagrams. NASA originally planned for ten Moon landings - Apollo 11 through 20 - and in the second half of the book, Norris explores why returning people to the Moon has not been prioritized over the past forty years.

"The May 1961 decision to send men to the Moon was taken on Cold War strategic political grounds. The main motivation was not to advance science or to explore the universe," explains Norris. "Apollo happened because its success was made a national strategic priority with a budget to match for several years."

Norris contrasts this with the bungled Soviet program which was ultimately cancelled after repeated failures of their giant N1 launcher. In the final chapters of the book, he assesses who might be in a position to launch a new mission to the Moon and when this might happen. For the first time since the 1970s there are realistic schedules for people to once again walk on the Moon. Who will be the next to do it? The United States, China, or a private company?

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Pat Norris spent 50 years working on space projects including the Apollo Moon landings as a NASA contractor and the Hubble Space Telescope as a European Space Agency program manager. Since 1980, he has worked for the company CGI, and he is currently a part-time consultant to its Space Business Unit. Norris is the author of two books on space surveillance as well as many articles, book chapters and conference presentations on all aspects of space. He was awarded the Apollo Individual Achievement Award in 1969 and the Sir Arthur Clarke Lifetime Achievement Award in 2016.

Norris, Pat
Returning People to the Moon After Apollo: Will It Be Another Fifty Years?
2019, 231 p. 88 illus.
Softcover €29.95 | £24.99 | $34.99 |
ISBN 978-3-030-14914-7
Also available as an eBook


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