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Summer 2023 saw two missions to the Moon. Why are scientists so keen to get there? Find out with Georgie and Neil.
Who was the third astronaut on the Apollo 11 mission, after Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin?a) Yuri Gargarinb) Michael Collins? or,c) Alan Shepard?
Listen to the programme to hear the answer.
inertnot moving; unable to move
cratervery large hole in the ground, which has been caused by something hitting it or by an explosion; the round hole at the top of a volcano
pockmarkedmarked by small holes and scars
a big dealimportant or significant
trace (something back)discover the causes of something by investigating how it developed
a smoking gunindisputable incriminating evidence; conclusive proof of something
TRANSCRIPT
Note: This is not a word-for-word transcript.
NeilHello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I’m Neil.
GeorgieAnd I’m Georgie. “That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind” – famous words, but do you know who said them?
NeilOf course - that was Neil Armstrong, the first person to land on the Moon.
GeorgieRight, the Apollo 11 spacecraft landed Neil Armstrong on the Moon on the 20th of July 1969. But in decades after that famous event, interest in returning to the Moon faded away... until now.
NeilSummer 2023 saw the start of a new race for the Moon between Russia’s Luna-25 spacecraft and India’s Chandrayaan-3. Russia’s rocket crashed on landing, but Chandrayaan-3 successfully touched down on the 23rd of August, making India only the fourth country to successfully land on the Moon.
GeorgieBut why this sudden interest in going back to the Moon? That’s what we’ll be discussing in this programme and, as usual, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary too.
NeilBut before we blast off, I have a question for you, Georgie. Everyone knows that Neil Armstrong was the first man on the Moon, and was followed by a second astronaut, Buzz Aldrin. But who was the third Apollo astronaut who flew the command module while his crewmates walked on the Moon? Was it:
a) Yuri Gagarin?b) Michael Collins? or,c) Alan Shepard?
GeorgieHmm, I think it was Michael Collins.
NeilOkay, Georgie, we’ll find out the answer at the end of the programme. In some ways, the current interest in the Moon is really more about the origins of Earth. One theory is that during the early days of the solar system, around 4 billion years ago, another planet crashed into Earth breaking off a part which then formed the Moon. Unlike the Earth’s surface, which is constantly moving, the Moon is completely still, frozen in time to create a perfectly preserved record of what happened at the birth of the solar system. Here’s astronomer, Dr Becky Smethurst, explaining more to BBC Radio 4 programme, Inside Science:
Dr Becky Smethurst…Whereas on the Moon, it’s just this inert rock, there's no atmosphere so every single thing that's happened to the Moon in its four-and-a-half billion years’ worth history is still recorded there on it. And so, if anyone's ever seen an image of the far side of the Moon, the side of the Moon that we cannot see from Earth is incredibly pockmarked. There are craters all over that thing, and so this is a really big deal when we're thinking about what happened to the early Earth as well, because we think all of the Earth's water came from impacts with comets and asteroids in the very early days of the solar system.
GeorgieThe rock which makes up the Moon is inert – it doesn’t move. It’s also full of craters - large holes in the ground caused by something hitting it. The Moon has so many of these craters, it’s described as pockmarked – having a surface that’s covered in small marks and scars.
NeilThese craters play an important part in the story. Because the Moon’s surface does not change, finding water there would explain a lot about how water, and therefore life, started on Earth. That’s why Dr Smethurst calls the Moon mission a big deal, meaning important or significant.
GeorgieThat’s right. Astronomers know that comets are full of ice, and think comets brought water to Earth when they crashed into it. Evidence of those crashes has been erased by the constantly moving surfaces on Earth, but not on the Moon. So, comparing water from the Moon with water on Earth could provide scientists with vital information, as Dr Smethurst explained to BBC Radio 4’s, Inside Science:
Dr Becky SmethurstSo they'll be looking essentially to see if it has the same characteristics as water here on Earth, and then we can sort of trace that back from sort of the crater history as well to working out what actually happened. How long has it been there for as well. Also, various other minerals that might be there, these very heavy minerals that we know come from comets and asteroids. Again, that would be this sort of smoking gun to be like, yes this that's where this water came from and it's likely that Earth’s water came from there as well.
NeilScientists can trace the existence of water on the Moon back to find out what happened on Earth. If you trace something back, you discover the causes of something by investigating how it developed.
GeorgieFor this reason, Dr Smethurst says finding water on the Moon would be finding a smoking gun, a modern idiom meaning indisputable evidence or proof. We’ve learned a lot about the Moon, but we still don’t know the answer to your question, Neil - who was the third Apollo astronaut on that famous first landing in 1969? I said it was Michael Collins…
NeilWhich was… the correct answer! Michael Collins never set foot on the Moon himself, but afterwards said the experience of looking back at Earth from the Apollo spacecraft changed his life forever. OK, let’s recap the vocabulary we’ve learned from our trip to the Moon, starting with inert, not moving or unable to move.
GeorgieA crater is a very large hole in the ground.
NeilPockmarked means marked by small holes and scars.
GeorgieIf you say something is a big deal,it’s important or significant in some way.
NeilTo trace something back means to discover its causes by examining how it developed.
GeorgieAnd finally, the idiom a smoking gun refers to indisputable evidence or conclusive proof of something. Once again, our six minutes are up. us next time for more scintillating science and useful vocabulary here at 6 Minute English. Goodbye for now!
NeilGoodbye!
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