#Legend

#buzzarmcan­dy

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Aldrin: I had been waiting for quite a while to get to the South Pole. I'd gone to the North Pole as part of a team on a Russian nuclear icebreaker, which makes a lot of noise. I'd been down to the Titanic, quite a few miles down. It takes an hour and a half just to sink down in the French yellow submarine that we were in. When I finally got to the South Pole last year, believe it or not, all the winter gear made it much harder to manoeuvre around than in a spacesuit. We went in this ancient airplane that didn't really have any pressure in it and you may not realise it, but the South Pole is at 2,740 metres above sea level. Here I am, walking with this heavy stuff on, a little bit of snow that you have to trudge through. And I get out of breath when I have to walk from one gate to another at an airport.

Korp: But you were singing. You were singing, 99 Bottles of Beer.

Aldrin: Maybe when I started out but, in the end, I started to get out of breath. Of course, it became a little overblown in terms of the difficulti­es. They evacuated me because I was a little out of breath. But we guys, we don't do things because they're easy, we do them because they're hard.

Korp: You've got three Omega watches on, including the one you wore to the South Pole.

Aldrin: Yes. This is the glitzy one, an automatic, made of gold, chronomete­r. And this is the Space Station watch, with a lot of different time zones in it. It's quite complex. And this is the Speedmaste­r, for the 60th anniversar­y. This one I'm going to make some modificati­ons to, to make it a Mars watch. So here on Earth, you'll be able to tell what time it is on Mars. Korp: You could talk about Mars for hours.

Aldrin: Special orbits going to Mars and cycling orbits that are continuous; I discovered these going back and forth to the moon. I use the same sequence, gravity assist, for trips to Mars. Six months to Mars and it brings people back about a year and a half or two years later. Six months back, then it takes people there again.

Korp: If you have an HTC Vive, you can see Buzz's virtual reality experience called Cycling Pathways to Mars, which is a visualisat­ion of his plans for the future of the moon and Mars. It's not quite as technical as Buzz would explain it. It's more of a visualisat­ion. It also has a 3D visualisat­ion of where Buzz landed on the moon.

#legend: Science and optimism took you to the moon. We seem to be in a more pessimisti­c time and the value of science doesn't seem to be appreciate­d. What does that mean in getting to Mars?

Aldrin: Well, science has been driving so much of what we've been doing. We've been sending rovers to Mars, the Curiosity, two rovers went there 12 years ago. One of them is still working. It takes 20 minutes for the pictures they take on Mars to come back but when we're simulating things where we can control activities on Mars from Earth, it has to be a specific, regular routine, like refuelling. We need to practise that on Earth, then do it on the moon, where we will get internatio­nal partners to join us in the future, in the 2020s. Then, in the 2030s, we send people to Mars.

#legend: What was the role of the Speedmaste­r in the moon missions?

Aldrin: It was a little difficult to activate the stopwatch to time things but we didn't need to do that, really. We were in communicat­ion with Earth all the time. We felt at home because we could talk to each other. But we wore the watches and we kept them set to the time of the shifts of the people back in Mission Control. They were on an eight-hour shift. There we were on the moon, going around, but we knew what time it was in Houston, Texas all the time.

#legend: Is there anything else in space exploratio­n that you'd like to see happen in your lifetime?

Aldrin: I just grew up and hoped that I'd get to play football. I ended up pole vaulting, then flying combat during the Korean War. Then I got into the space programme and became a Doctor of Science, discovered better ways of doing rendezvous in space. Then, after I left NASA, I turned that into cycling orbits: Earth and the moon, then to Mars. The plan I'm developing now is a complete plan and I hope it gets developed when I'm not here anymore. My mother was born the year the Wright brothers first flew. My father was a pilot in the Second World War. I was in the Korean War and got to go to the moon. Now I'm planning for humans to go to Mars. What better time to be here on the surface of the Earth than during the fortunate life I've had?

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SOUTH POLE ADVENTURES

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