The Independent

I’m 18 and training to go to Mars after being inspired by the moon landing mission

- ALYSSA CARSON

My dream ever since I was a little girl has been to successful­ly complete a mission to the Red Planet, a goal that was made possible by my biggest idols in space history. Though it began with a fantasy, it wasn’t long before I began taking it extremely seriously, studying maps of Mars, reading about space, and watching videos of rovers crawling along surfaces of various planets. I then went to space camp, which flooded my mind with the possibilit­ies of careers and opportunit­ies I could undertake in space. As I grew up and continued going to camp, I learned what I wanted my role to be. I was going to be the first person on

Mars.

This weekend is the golden anniversar­y of the Apollo missions. Apollo was the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion’s (Nasa) third space program, which succeeded following a goal set by president John F Kennedy in 1962. Only seven years later, we had done it. And now, 50 years later, we’re commemorat­ing all 400,000 people who have since had a hand in getting a total of 24 astronauts to the moon, landing 12 of them on its surface, and returning them all home safely.

When humans come together with one goal, we can achieve the impossible, and Mars could be the next accomplish­ment

The space program has excited me since I could remember. This generation is starting to ignite the same spirit that was present half a century ago when getting to the moon was still a mere aspiration. Despite not seeing men walk on the moon with my own eyes at the time, I assure you, we will make history like this again in my lifetime. I may even be the one to make the first steps. When humans come together with one goal, we can achieve the impossible, and Mars could be the next accomplish­ment.

The Apollo program gave us a model for keeping up the enthusiasm towards a goal that was once considered impossible. Without the incredibly smart people who problem-solved a way to lift 6.2 million pounds off of planet Earth, into space, towards the moon, landing men, and returning them safely, we wouldn’t be where we are today. Nor would I.

As part of my mission to make history, I have joined a citizen science program called Project Possum. Possum studies the Earth’s upper atmosphere and also works in the developmen­t of Final Frontier Space Suit Design. Through my training with the program, I became certified for a research suborbital space flight

mission by the age of 17. A year later, Mars remains my ultimate goal, even if I have to wait until the early 2030s for the rocket, technology and crew to be ready.

Anyone of any age has the capacity to understand the importance of this celebratio­n, whether it is a feeling of nostalgia or anticipati­on for what the future holds. I love the Apollo program and what it did and I cannot wait to continue in similar footsteps in my own career.

We should celebrate the minds, time, commitment, passion and bravery of those who risked their lives for the Apollo program in the hope of sparking that same spirit that lives in many people today. It is beautiful timing that, as we celebrate the 50th anniversar­y of the moon landing, we are also in the midst of introducin­g Project Artemis to bring humans back to the moon and eventually on to Mars.

As we look back and admire the Saturn V rocket that brought us to the moon, we should also look forward to the Space Launch System, due to launch in 2020 as part of the Artemis project. I truly am very excited for the future of the space program and the direction it is headed. Further space exploratio­n is the way of the future, and I am all in.

 ??  ?? Buzz Aldrin on the walk that amazed the world 50 years ago (PA)
Buzz Aldrin on the walk that amazed the world 50 years ago (PA)
 ??  ?? Alyssa Carson wearing space gear (Accenture)
Alyssa Carson wearing space gear (Accenture)

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