Maybe we’ll have the 50th-anniversary celebration in 2083.
Humanity will have to go far afield to notch another spaceflight achievement with the cultural heft of Apollo 11.

NASA is planning to send astronauts to Mars in the 2030s.(Image: © NASA)
The epic first moon landing, which occurred on July 20, 1969, inspired a generation, spurring kids around the world to care about science and space exploration. Indeed, many of us are taking some time this week to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission and take stock of its legacy.
Similar fanfare will likely attend the semicentennial of the first crewed Mars landing, which NASA aims to pull off in the 2030s, agency chief Jim Bridenstine said.
“The president has said that we need to go to Mars,” Bridenstine said, referring to President Donald Trump, during a teleconference with reporters today (July 15).
“We need to send humans to Mars. We need to put an American flag on Mars— that’s the goal,” he added. “I think when that stunning achievement occurs, it will inspire a new generation, just like Apollo has inspired our generation.”
NASA’s crewed Mars plans include a return to the moon under an ambitious exploration program known as Artemis. The agency plans to use the moon as a steppingstone, where NASA can learn and test the skills required for the long trip to the Red Planet.
One of the biggest Artemis milestones is scheduled for 2024, when NASA aims to put two astronauts down near the moon’s south pole. One of those explorers will be a woman, agency officials have said — the first ever to set foot on the moon. (All 12 Apollo moonwalkers were men.)
This crewed lunar return was originally targeted for 2028, but Vice President Mike Pence officially accelerated the timetable during a speech this past March. The increased urgency recently spurred Bridenstine to shake up NASA’s human-exploration team, reassigning longtime leader Bill Gerstenmaier and a top deputy.
It’s unclear how much it will cost to put boots back on the moon, but Bridestine said today that the agency may well be able to do it for “significantly less” than $20 billion. He also stressed that a crewed Mars mission by the early to mid-2030s is still feasible, despite a recent independent report suggesting otherwise.
“I am not willing to rule out 2033 at all,” Bridenstine said.
Sources: • Space.com
Featured Image: NASA






Sebastien Clarke
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