1 00:00:07,280 --> 00:00:09,480 Hello, and welcome to Cape Canaveral in Florida. 2 00:00:09,480 --> 00:00:12,760 This is Kennedy Space Center, where, 50 years ago, 3 00:00:12,760 --> 00:00:15,960 Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins 4 00:00:15,960 --> 00:00:18,040 blasted off aboard Apollo 11. 5 00:00:18,040 --> 00:00:21,840 And on July 20th, 1969, Neil and Buzz became 6 00:00:21,840 --> 00:00:25,280 the first humans to walk on the moon. 7 00:00:25,280 --> 00:00:27,200 It's very pretty out here. 8 00:00:28,360 --> 00:00:32,040 Tonight, we're celebrating that anniversary. 9 00:00:32,040 --> 00:00:34,000 But also looking forward. 10 00:00:35,080 --> 00:00:39,080 Because right now, here, new spacecraft are being designed, 11 00:00:39,080 --> 00:00:41,920 built and launched, with the ultimate aim of bringing 12 00:00:41,920 --> 00:00:45,640 astronauts back to the moon, to Mars, and even beyond. 13 00:00:48,480 --> 00:00:52,400 Over the next 90 minutes, we'll be revealing the future 14 00:00:52,400 --> 00:00:54,040 of human space travel. 15 00:00:55,600 --> 00:00:59,440 I'm Brian Cox, he's Dara O Briain, and this is Stargazing. 16 00:01:07,160 --> 00:01:09,000 "Come to Florida," they said! 17 00:01:09,000 --> 00:01:10,440 "It's the Sunshine State!" 18 00:01:10,440 --> 00:01:11,920 We're in a gale. 19 00:01:11,920 --> 00:01:14,080 It's the curse of Stargazing weather, isn't it? 20 00:01:14,080 --> 00:01:15,680 We just bring... We're like rain gods, 21 00:01:15,680 --> 00:01:17,120 we bring the bad weather with us. 22 00:01:17,120 --> 00:01:19,480 This is Cape Canaveral launch complex 41. 23 00:01:19,480 --> 00:01:22,000 The reason it's so windy is we're right at the very top 24 00:01:22,000 --> 00:01:25,840 of the crew's access tower, and if you have the nerve to look 25 00:01:25,840 --> 00:01:28,280 down there, which I do not, you'll see the launchpad itself, 26 00:01:28,280 --> 00:01:31,760 a launchpad with a glorious history. 27 00:01:31,760 --> 00:01:35,360 This launchpad is part of the Cape Canaveral spaceport 28 00:01:35,360 --> 00:01:37,040 in eastern Florida. 29 00:01:37,040 --> 00:01:40,480 It's spread across over 200 square miles. 30 00:01:41,920 --> 00:01:45,960 In the centre are the rocket factories and science labs, 31 00:01:45,960 --> 00:01:49,600 while the launchpads are scattered along the coastline about four miles 32 00:01:49,600 --> 00:01:51,600 to the east. 33 00:01:51,600 --> 00:01:55,840 From here, over 400 people have blasted into space, 34 00:01:55,840 --> 00:01:58,000 and 24 to the moon. 35 00:01:59,200 --> 00:02:01,440 Well, the other benefits, by the way, of being at this height, 36 00:02:01,440 --> 00:02:03,320 we can see the entire Florida coast. 37 00:02:03,320 --> 00:02:06,480 We can see the North Atlantic, and all around us in the distance, 38 00:02:06,480 --> 00:02:08,560 you can see more and more launchpads. 39 00:02:08,560 --> 00:02:10,440 There are five active pads here. 40 00:02:10,440 --> 00:02:13,360 This is America's busiest spaceport. 41 00:02:13,360 --> 00:02:15,600 Yeah, and I must say, this is probably the second most 42 00:02:15,600 --> 00:02:19,000 iconic launchpad here, because the most iconic has got 43 00:02:19,000 --> 00:02:21,320 to be that one. Can you see that? The black tower in the distance. 44 00:02:21,320 --> 00:02:25,360 That is where Apollo 11 launched 50 years ago. 45 00:02:26,920 --> 00:02:29,240 On tonight's programme 46 00:02:29,240 --> 00:02:33,720 we'll explore the three key stages of a space mission. 47 00:02:33,720 --> 00:02:37,560 Blasting off from planet Earth... 48 00:02:37,560 --> 00:02:40,040 RADIO: Houston, we see you, over. 49 00:02:40,040 --> 00:02:43,240 ..living in the hostile environment of space... 50 00:02:44,440 --> 00:02:47,440 ..and finally, landing on an alien world. 51 00:02:47,440 --> 00:02:51,000 RADIO: That's one small step for man... 52 00:02:51,000 --> 00:02:54,200 We'll be joined by Apollo legend Charlie Duke. 53 00:02:54,200 --> 00:02:55,840 We are go, sit tight, we are go. 54 00:02:55,840 --> 00:02:58,680 He'll tell us what it was like to guide Neil Armstrong 55 00:02:58,680 --> 00:03:01,320 and Buzz Aldrin to the lunar surface. 56 00:03:02,960 --> 00:03:07,000 And as Nasa once again prepares for crewed missions, 57 00:03:07,000 --> 00:03:11,040 we'll look at the exciting future of space exploration. 58 00:03:13,160 --> 00:03:16,320 Medic and astrophysicist Doctor Kevin Fong 59 00:03:16,320 --> 00:03:19,520 attempts the latest in spacewalking technology. 60 00:03:19,520 --> 00:03:22,240 I've just fallen off the Space Station. 61 00:03:22,240 --> 00:03:25,680 And mathematician Doctor Hannah Fry 62 00:03:25,680 --> 00:03:28,760 test-drives a future Mars buggy. 63 00:03:28,760 --> 00:03:31,160 Crab out of a crater! 64 00:03:37,280 --> 00:03:39,520 One of the things about being at the top of the tower 65 00:03:39,520 --> 00:03:41,720 like this is you get a real sense of what it 66 00:03:41,720 --> 00:03:45,600 must be like for an astronaut to take those final earthbound steps 67 00:03:45,600 --> 00:03:47,840 before entering a tiny capsule 68 00:03:47,840 --> 00:03:50,280 sitting on top of a 50 metre rocket 69 00:03:50,280 --> 00:03:53,320 with enough power in it to lift them off the planet 70 00:03:53,320 --> 00:03:55,560 and into the blackness of space. 71 00:03:55,560 --> 00:03:57,640 And during the first part of this programme, 72 00:03:57,640 --> 00:04:01,040 we will be examining that monumental effort that's required to create 73 00:04:01,040 --> 00:04:02,400 a successful liftoff. 74 00:04:02,400 --> 00:04:04,120 Could you see yourself doing that? 75 00:04:04,120 --> 00:04:07,360 Honestly, I couldn't fit into the capsules on Apollo. 76 00:04:07,360 --> 00:04:10,680 They're made for the small... All astronauts are, like, that tall. 77 00:04:10,680 --> 00:04:13,760 But now, interesting, yeah, maybe, maybe there's been... 78 00:04:13,760 --> 00:04:16,280 Maybe they're built for the bigger man now. 79 00:04:16,280 --> 00:04:20,720 Well, the most famous launch of all, I suppose, was 50 years ago, 80 00:04:20,720 --> 00:04:22,360 Apollo 11. 81 00:04:24,200 --> 00:04:26,640 Apollo 11, this is launch operations manager. 82 00:04:26,640 --> 00:04:29,560 The launch team wishes you good luck and Godspeed. 83 00:04:31,920 --> 00:04:37,000 At 6:52 on the morning of the 16th of July, 1969, 84 00:04:37,000 --> 00:04:39,240 Commander Neil Armstrong, 85 00:04:39,240 --> 00:04:42,760 lunar module pilot Buzz Aldrin 86 00:04:42,760 --> 00:04:45,920 and command module pilot Michael Collins... 87 00:04:48,480 --> 00:04:52,080 ..took the lift to the top of the Saturn V rocket to climb 88 00:04:52,080 --> 00:04:55,280 aboard their Apollo spacecraft. 89 00:04:55,280 --> 00:04:58,320 RADIO COMMS: Roger, they're running on idle power. OK. 90 00:05:00,760 --> 00:05:04,200 Whilst the world waited, the astronauts and ground control 91 00:05:04,200 --> 00:05:07,240 teams ran through systems checks. 92 00:05:07,240 --> 00:05:09,480 RADIO COMMS: Stand by for S4V. 93 00:05:09,480 --> 00:05:12,520 Stand by for S4V, the COI capability. 94 00:05:12,520 --> 00:05:17,000 It had taken nine years, 400,000 engineers, 95 00:05:17,000 --> 00:05:22,680 scientists and technicians and an estimated £88 billion 96 00:05:22,680 --> 00:05:25,480 to get to this point. 97 00:05:25,480 --> 00:05:29,320 RADIO COMMS: T -15 seconds, guidance is internal. 98 00:05:29,320 --> 00:05:32,440 12, 11, 10, 9... 99 00:05:32,440 --> 00:05:36,920 At exactly 9:31am, the main engines ignited. 100 00:05:38,280 --> 00:05:41,160 Zero! All engines running. 101 00:05:42,960 --> 00:05:45,680 Liftoff, we have a liftoff! 102 00:05:52,320 --> 00:05:56,640 Burning nearly 3 million litres of hydrogen and oxygen, 103 00:05:56,640 --> 00:06:02,240 the 111 metre Saturn V rocket broke free of Earth's gravity. 104 00:06:03,480 --> 00:06:05,960 RADIO COMMS: Neil Armstrong reporting the roll and pitch 105 00:06:05,960 --> 00:06:08,200 programme, which puts Apollo 11 on a proper heading. 106 00:06:10,280 --> 00:06:15,680 The first key step in Neil, Buzz and Michael's 107 00:06:15,680 --> 00:06:17,160 historic journey to the moon. 108 00:06:35,880 --> 00:06:38,720 Today, this launchpad is home to commercial space company 109 00:06:38,720 --> 00:06:40,520 United Launch Alliance. 110 00:06:40,520 --> 00:06:43,120 From here, they launch satellites and space probes 111 00:06:43,120 --> 00:06:45,400 on uncrewed rockets. 112 00:06:45,400 --> 00:06:49,200 Well, this pad has now been upgraded for human space flight, 113 00:06:49,200 --> 00:06:52,200 and I think it is very exciting to imagine that at some point 114 00:06:52,200 --> 00:06:55,800 later this year, astronauts may be stood in this very spot, 115 00:06:55,800 --> 00:07:01,200 about to board Boeing's new CST-100 Starliner spacecraft. 116 00:07:01,200 --> 00:07:05,040 I'm going to show you slightly more of a geographical rundown, 117 00:07:05,040 --> 00:07:07,440 because we very rarely get this level of access. 118 00:07:07,440 --> 00:07:09,080 It's fairly straightforward. 119 00:07:09,080 --> 00:07:11,160 There's a lift, a solid, shockproof lift. 120 00:07:11,160 --> 00:07:14,200 There's a toilet, not so much for the astronauts, 121 00:07:14,200 --> 00:07:16,640 because that is quite a palaver to get them out of the suit. 122 00:07:16,640 --> 00:07:21,800 This walk is the iconic slow-motion to music walk that astronauts make. 123 00:07:21,800 --> 00:07:24,520 They'd walk through this, and there's an arm that would swing 124 00:07:24,520 --> 00:07:27,400 from here out to the capsule. 125 00:07:27,400 --> 00:07:30,720 That arm now is swung inside, so we can actually go into it. 126 00:07:30,720 --> 00:07:33,840 This is the equivalent, I suppose, of the jetway, 127 00:07:33,840 --> 00:07:35,560 when you board your plane. 128 00:07:35,560 --> 00:07:38,200 This is the equivalent of it in space terms, 129 00:07:38,200 --> 00:07:41,680 and it leads to an incredibly special place called The White Room. 130 00:07:43,680 --> 00:07:46,760 The White Room is the last room the astronauts will see, 131 00:07:46,760 --> 00:07:49,120 the last place on Earth the astronauts will see 132 00:07:49,120 --> 00:07:51,000 before they take off. 133 00:07:51,000 --> 00:07:53,040 Some of the information here is very, very fundamental. 134 00:07:53,040 --> 00:07:54,640 This is the countdown, obviously. 135 00:07:54,640 --> 00:07:56,840 That shows how long until the liftoff occurs. 136 00:07:56,840 --> 00:07:59,600 This red phone is a direct line to launch control. 137 00:07:59,600 --> 00:08:02,360 The yellow phone, in a slightly more kind of touching way, 138 00:08:02,360 --> 00:08:05,400 is for the astronauts to ring their families one last time. 139 00:08:05,400 --> 00:08:08,280 And then they get suited up, or finished their preparations, 140 00:08:08,280 --> 00:08:09,760 and placed into their capsule. 141 00:08:09,760 --> 00:08:13,360 The man who'd be looking after all of that is Dane Dreftly. 142 00:08:13,360 --> 00:08:17,400 You are the chief of the tower crew. Am I right? 143 00:08:17,400 --> 00:08:20,040 Yes. Yes. Tower Chief, Blue Team Lead is my official title. 144 00:08:20,040 --> 00:08:22,680 This White Room is very, very important, because this, 145 00:08:22,680 --> 00:08:25,400 this is it, this is the last contact we have with them. 146 00:08:25,400 --> 00:08:27,600 Yes, it is. How long is the process? 147 00:08:27,600 --> 00:08:29,920 It's a four-hour process from the time we get the rocket 148 00:08:29,920 --> 00:08:33,240 fully fuelled and ready for the process to begin loading 149 00:08:33,240 --> 00:08:35,880 the astronauts, and my team will be the first to arrive, 150 00:08:35,880 --> 00:08:37,120 we'll be the first ones in. 151 00:08:37,120 --> 00:08:40,720 We will configure this whole room to get ready for the crew. 152 00:08:40,720 --> 00:08:43,720 And the last to arrive will be the astronauts? 153 00:08:43,720 --> 00:08:44,800 Correct, yes. 154 00:08:44,800 --> 00:08:48,240 So there'll be five people here inside the White Room, 155 00:08:48,240 --> 00:08:50,680 helping the astronauts get into the capsule, 156 00:08:50,680 --> 00:08:53,360 configuring everything, and then my crew, including myself, 157 00:08:53,360 --> 00:08:56,960 will be three. We'll be standing by outside, overseeing 158 00:08:56,960 --> 00:08:58,160 the entire operation. 159 00:08:58,160 --> 00:09:05,560 Before launch, the astronauts take turns to wee on the bus, 160 00:09:05,560 --> 00:09:08,000 the back wheel of the bus. You're familiar with this tradition? 161 00:09:08,000 --> 00:09:10,000 I am familiar with that tradition, yes. 162 00:09:10,000 --> 00:09:13,720 Is there the opportunity to establish brand-new traditions? 163 00:09:13,720 --> 00:09:17,120 Yes. We are, you know, the steely-eyed missile men, 164 00:09:17,120 --> 00:09:19,480 we're kind of superstitious in many ways. Yeah. 165 00:09:19,480 --> 00:09:23,760 And the rituals that we've established 166 00:09:23,760 --> 00:09:25,840 I still do every time. 167 00:09:25,840 --> 00:09:28,080 So the last thing I do is I give it a little, 168 00:09:28,080 --> 00:09:30,800 you know, pat on the very top of the nose cone and say, 169 00:09:30,800 --> 00:09:33,560 "Let's go, people." Yeah, so... 170 00:09:33,560 --> 00:09:35,600 Does it have any bearing on reality? 171 00:09:35,600 --> 00:09:38,360 No, absolutely not, but it certainly makes me feel better. 172 00:09:38,360 --> 00:09:39,840 Lovely. Very, very good. 173 00:09:39,840 --> 00:09:41,400 Dane, thank you very much. 174 00:09:41,400 --> 00:09:44,720 Five and a half miles from Dane's launch tower, 175 00:09:44,720 --> 00:09:47,200 on the other side of the Cape Canaveral site, 176 00:09:47,200 --> 00:09:49,800 lies a building that houses one of the most famous 177 00:09:49,800 --> 00:09:51,640 rockets ever built - 178 00:09:51,640 --> 00:09:55,080 the machine that propelled astronauts to the moon, 179 00:09:55,080 --> 00:09:56,320 the Saturn V. 180 00:09:58,160 --> 00:10:00,600 Nothing prepares you for the scale of this thing. 181 00:10:00,600 --> 00:10:03,560 This is the only rocket ever to have taken astronauts 182 00:10:03,560 --> 00:10:05,480 beyond Earth orbit. 183 00:10:05,480 --> 00:10:10,240 These five F1 engines are the most powerful rocket engines ever flown. 184 00:10:10,240 --> 00:10:15,600 They burn through 15 tonnes of rocket fuel every second at liftoff. 185 00:10:15,600 --> 00:10:19,880 The fuel pumps alone are more powerful than a 747 flying 186 00:10:19,880 --> 00:10:23,960 down the runway, and that's what you need to lift this 187 00:10:23,960 --> 00:10:26,560 3,000-tonne spacecraft off the ground. 188 00:10:26,560 --> 00:10:31,040 Now, in this fuel tank, there are 2,000 tonnes of 189 00:10:31,040 --> 00:10:33,280 rocket fuel, and those F1 engines 190 00:10:33,280 --> 00:10:36,320 burn through it in about two and a half minutes, 191 00:10:36,320 --> 00:10:41,000 at which point, the spacecraft is at an altitude of around 38 miles. 192 00:10:41,000 --> 00:10:44,280 The fuel is exhausted, so you don't need the first stage 193 00:10:44,280 --> 00:10:46,840 any more, and so it's jettisoned, 194 00:10:46,840 --> 00:10:51,960 falls away, leaving the second stage of the Saturn V. 195 00:10:51,960 --> 00:10:55,760 In this case, five engines again, but a little bit smaller. 196 00:10:55,760 --> 00:10:59,520 It's their job to take the spacecraft from an altitude 197 00:10:59,520 --> 00:11:04,800 of 38 miles to around 114.5 miles. 198 00:11:04,800 --> 00:11:10,120 And they do that by burning through a second tank of rocket fuel. 199 00:11:10,120 --> 00:11:16,560 Now, after about six minutes or so, the fuel in this tank is also 200 00:11:16,560 --> 00:11:20,200 exhausted, and so the second stage is no longer necessary, 201 00:11:20,200 --> 00:11:22,840 and so it too falls away. 202 00:11:22,840 --> 00:11:27,560 The spacecraft is then almost in orbit, but not quite. 203 00:11:27,560 --> 00:11:32,400 And so a single engine on the third stage takes over. 204 00:11:32,400 --> 00:11:37,280 Now, this engine burns to take the speed of the moon ship, 205 00:11:37,280 --> 00:11:41,520 which is this piece, for about 17,500 miles per hour, 206 00:11:41,520 --> 00:11:44,320 at which point this is in orbit. 207 00:11:44,320 --> 00:11:47,720 Then the spacecraft continues to orbit the Earth until everybody's 208 00:11:47,720 --> 00:11:51,640 convinced it's working properly, and then the single engine ignites 209 00:11:51,640 --> 00:11:56,360 one last time to take the moon ship to 24,500 miles per hour, 210 00:11:56,360 --> 00:11:58,880 and it's on its way to the moon. 211 00:11:58,880 --> 00:12:03,240 So, this is what you need to launch this, which is pretty much 212 00:12:03,240 --> 00:12:05,720 the smallest ship you can imagine. 213 00:12:05,720 --> 00:12:09,600 The minimum spaceship, if you like, to take three astronauts 214 00:12:09,600 --> 00:12:12,320 to the moon, and bring them back again. 215 00:12:16,280 --> 00:12:18,920 But what would it have been like to sit on top of this? 216 00:12:18,920 --> 00:12:22,160 Well, luckily, we're joined by a man who can tell us exactly that, 217 00:12:22,160 --> 00:12:25,600 the lunar module pilot for Apollo 16 and tenth man to walk 218 00:12:25,600 --> 00:12:27,240 on the moon, General Charlie Duke. 219 00:12:27,240 --> 00:12:29,240 Thank you very much. Charlie, lovely to meet you. 220 00:12:29,240 --> 00:12:31,920 Nice to see you, hi. All right. How are you? Nice to see you, Charlie. 221 00:12:31,920 --> 00:12:35,160 What, how was the ride, basically, in a vehicle like this? 222 00:12:35,160 --> 00:12:38,640 Well, at liftoff, it was real shaky, which surprised me. 223 00:12:38,640 --> 00:12:42,680 I didn't remember anybody telling me it was supposed to shake as much as it did, 224 00:12:42,680 --> 00:12:46,520 but you can imagine, the vehicle is 110 metres long. 225 00:12:46,520 --> 00:12:49,960 You are sitting on that far end, and these engines that you see here 226 00:12:49,960 --> 00:12:55,840 are moving, and as they move, that vibration goes up the launch, 227 00:12:55,840 --> 00:12:57,720 the stack, if you will. 228 00:12:57,720 --> 00:13:02,000 And when it hits the spacecraft, it's a real big vibration. 229 00:13:02,000 --> 00:13:05,160 I found out later at liftoff, I was so excited, my heartbeat 230 00:13:05,160 --> 00:13:08,320 was 144 at liftoff. 231 00:13:08,320 --> 00:13:12,320 And I was really excited, man, I'm on my way. 232 00:13:12,320 --> 00:13:15,360 You know, we trained for two years for this moment. 233 00:13:15,360 --> 00:13:18,120 I can't believe that nobody mentioned, you're Apollo 16, 234 00:13:18,120 --> 00:13:19,840 nobody mentioned the shaking? 235 00:13:19,840 --> 00:13:24,960 Well, it's... Each vehicle had its own character, if you will. 236 00:13:24,960 --> 00:13:28,960 And I think ours was a little bit more, and I can't tell you why, 237 00:13:28,960 --> 00:13:33,640 and I'm sure that we talked about it, but it didn't register. 238 00:13:33,640 --> 00:13:37,000 Right. Apollo 16 was your first flight into space. 239 00:13:37,000 --> 00:13:40,160 So, when all that drama is over, after only, what is it, 240 00:13:40,160 --> 00:13:44,560 12 or 13 minutes, and you're in orbit, what is that like? 241 00:13:44,560 --> 00:13:47,960 Well, let me say, we orbited the Earth one and a half times, 242 00:13:47,960 --> 00:13:52,320 and over Australia, we left Earth orbit to go ahead to the moon. 243 00:13:52,320 --> 00:13:55,400 And then after that, we turned our spaceship around, 244 00:13:55,400 --> 00:13:59,880 and there was the Earth, just suspended in the blackness of space out there. 245 00:13:59,880 --> 00:14:05,760 You could see the Arctic Circle and those white-brown of the land, 246 00:14:05,760 --> 00:14:09,520 and the blue of the ocean, suspended in the blackness of space. 247 00:14:09,520 --> 00:14:12,200 It's breathtaking to see that for the first time. 248 00:14:12,200 --> 00:14:14,760 Yeah, that must be very powerful, because there are very few people 249 00:14:14,760 --> 00:14:18,160 who've seen the whole Earth. Only 24 of us! 250 00:14:18,160 --> 00:14:20,680 The 24 men who went to the moon in Apollo 251 00:14:20,680 --> 00:14:25,280 have seen it with our own eyes, that whole circle of the Earth. 252 00:14:25,280 --> 00:14:29,040 Astronauts in Earth orbit see a lot of beautiful curvatures, 253 00:14:29,040 --> 00:14:32,760 but they can't see the whole of the Earth. 254 00:14:36,640 --> 00:14:40,080 Charlie's trip to the moon started from here, 255 00:14:40,080 --> 00:14:41,680 in Cape Canaveral. 256 00:14:41,680 --> 00:14:43,040 RADIO: We have a liftoff. 257 00:14:43,040 --> 00:14:45,640 The Saturn V lifting off the ground ploughs ahead, 258 00:14:45,640 --> 00:14:48,400 building up thrust. We've cleared the tower. 259 00:14:48,400 --> 00:14:54,280 But in 2011, Nasa retired the last of its spacecraft that could carry people into orbit. 260 00:14:55,920 --> 00:15:00,680 Since then, astronauts have had to fly from a Russian base. 261 00:15:00,680 --> 00:15:04,720 But now, Nasa and a group of commercial companies 262 00:15:04,720 --> 00:15:07,840 have been working to change that. 263 00:15:07,840 --> 00:15:14,000 Aerospace company Boeing is building the Starliner spacecraft, 264 00:15:14,000 --> 00:15:15,840 right here on site. 265 00:15:15,840 --> 00:15:19,280 It will fly on top of an Atlas V rocket, 266 00:15:19,280 --> 00:15:23,600 which currently takes satellites and space probes into orbit. 267 00:15:25,800 --> 00:15:29,840 When finished, it will fly up to seven astronauts per flight 268 00:15:29,840 --> 00:15:32,240 to the International Space Station, 269 00:15:32,240 --> 00:15:35,320 a laboratory in space that has been continuously occupied 270 00:15:35,320 --> 00:15:39,000 for 18 years by astronauts and cosmonauts. 271 00:15:40,680 --> 00:15:45,640 Another commercial company, Elon Musk's SpaceX, is also working 272 00:15:45,640 --> 00:15:48,920 to take people there by the end of the year. 273 00:15:48,920 --> 00:15:52,520 They have developed pioneering self-landing rockets. 274 00:15:52,520 --> 00:15:55,840 This make them re-usable, and means they have slashed the cost 275 00:15:55,840 --> 00:15:58,720 of getting cargo into space. 276 00:15:58,720 --> 00:16:03,440 RADIO: Two, one, zero, ignition, liftoff! 277 00:16:04,800 --> 00:16:08,720 In March 2019, the company successfully tested their 278 00:16:08,720 --> 00:16:11,880 Crew Dragon spacecraft, which flies on top of their 279 00:16:11,880 --> 00:16:13,720 self-landing Falcon rocket. 280 00:16:13,720 --> 00:16:16,600 RADIO: Mission copy, vehicle is centred. 281 00:16:16,600 --> 00:16:20,080 This unmanned test proved it could dock with 282 00:16:20,080 --> 00:16:23,480 the International Space Station, a major milestone. 283 00:16:23,480 --> 00:16:29,080 But in April, disaster struck, when during an unmanned test, 284 00:16:29,080 --> 00:16:32,880 the Crew Dragon spacecraft exploded on the launchpad. 285 00:16:32,880 --> 00:16:34,840 MISSION TESTERS GASP 286 00:16:34,840 --> 00:16:37,280 No, no! 287 00:16:37,280 --> 00:16:40,520 Investigating the cause will mean delays. 288 00:16:43,720 --> 00:16:46,120 While commercial companies are looking to take people 289 00:16:46,120 --> 00:16:51,320 to the Space Station, Nasa's focus is deep space. 290 00:16:51,320 --> 00:16:55,360 It's building the Orion spacecraft to take people back to the moon, 291 00:16:55,360 --> 00:16:57,400 and eventually onto Mars. 292 00:16:58,840 --> 00:17:02,680 Orion will be carried by a new rocket, known as 293 00:17:02,680 --> 00:17:06,160 the Space Launch System, or SLS. 294 00:17:06,160 --> 00:17:09,000 It's being assembled at Nasa's Michoud base 295 00:17:09,000 --> 00:17:13,520 and, once completed, will tower to a height of 111 metres. 296 00:17:15,280 --> 00:17:21,760 Its engines will propel four astronauts to over 25,000 mph - 297 00:17:21,760 --> 00:17:26,640 the speed needed to escape Earth's gravity. 298 00:17:32,120 --> 00:17:37,200 Right now, those engines are being tested at a unique Nasa facility. 299 00:17:40,280 --> 00:17:43,320 Doctor Kevin Fong has been to investigate. 300 00:17:44,880 --> 00:17:48,240 I'm on my way to Hancock County in Mississippi, 301 00:17:48,240 --> 00:17:51,280 in search of Nasa's most secluded site. 302 00:17:51,280 --> 00:17:55,880 It's buried in the forest, far away from any town, 303 00:17:55,880 --> 00:17:58,960 because it really has to be. 304 00:17:58,960 --> 00:18:02,960 At John C Stennis Space Center, a team of engineers is preparing 305 00:18:02,960 --> 00:18:09,080 to test fire an engine that will power the space launch system SLS rocket. 306 00:18:11,280 --> 00:18:15,880 Despite the fact it will be the biggest rocket ever built, 307 00:18:15,880 --> 00:18:19,120 they're planning to use second-hand engines. 308 00:18:22,520 --> 00:18:27,360 This is an RS25 engine, and it's a marvel of engineering. 309 00:18:27,360 --> 00:18:31,480 The job of this engine is to move liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen, 310 00:18:31,480 --> 00:18:35,400 burning it, developing enough temperature and pressure to eject 311 00:18:35,400 --> 00:18:41,480 from this nozzle at 9,600 mph, and that generates enough thrust 312 00:18:41,480 --> 00:18:44,760 to get the next generation of exploration vehicle 313 00:18:44,760 --> 00:18:46,680 into deep space. 314 00:18:46,680 --> 00:18:52,400 Standing at 4.3 metres tall, and weighing around four tonnes, 315 00:18:52,400 --> 00:18:57,560 the RS25 has been Nasa's workhorse for more than 30 years. 316 00:18:57,560 --> 00:18:59,680 RADIO: We are go for main engine start. 317 00:18:59,680 --> 00:19:01,600 We have main engine start. 318 00:19:03,920 --> 00:19:08,800 It powered every one of the 135 space shuttle launches. 319 00:19:13,080 --> 00:19:16,960 But its next job will be far tougher. 320 00:19:16,960 --> 00:19:22,160 To lift the SLS' enormous weight, Nasa's engineers have two solid 321 00:19:22,160 --> 00:19:26,920 rocket boosters working alongside the RS25 engines. 322 00:19:26,920 --> 00:19:33,320 And they'll need to push the RS25s beyond anything they've done before. 323 00:19:33,320 --> 00:19:37,920 The aim of today's test is to run the engine 324 00:19:37,920 --> 00:19:44,160 past its proven maximum thrust, to 113% for 510 seconds. 325 00:19:44,160 --> 00:19:50,040 This is how long four RS25 engines will have to burn in unison 326 00:19:50,040 --> 00:19:52,880 to put the SLS safely into orbit. 327 00:19:54,520 --> 00:19:59,600 But pushing a rocket engine this hard is risky. 328 00:19:59,600 --> 00:20:03,840 The early history of uncrewed rockets shows just how easily 329 00:20:03,840 --> 00:20:05,680 things can go wrong. 330 00:20:14,240 --> 00:20:18,720 The test is being carried out on Stennis' A1 test stand. 331 00:20:19,880 --> 00:20:24,200 Towering at 60 metres tall, there's a further 60 metres 332 00:20:24,200 --> 00:20:29,680 of concrete and steel below ground to anchor the stand firmly in place, 333 00:20:29,680 --> 00:20:32,920 and stop the engine launching into the air. 334 00:20:35,640 --> 00:20:38,200 So we're on the build-up to the test now. 335 00:20:38,200 --> 00:20:41,040 In the background there is a team of engineers, 336 00:20:41,040 --> 00:20:44,880 making sure that it's running correctly, and at any moment, 337 00:20:44,880 --> 00:20:46,960 if anything looks wrong, if any of the pressures 338 00:20:46,960 --> 00:20:49,360 are out of range, if any of the flows look wrong, 339 00:20:49,360 --> 00:20:51,200 they will stop this test. 340 00:20:51,200 --> 00:20:54,240 SIREN BLARES 341 00:20:54,240 --> 00:20:58,280 That was a 60-second siren, so let's just stand by and watch 342 00:20:58,280 --> 00:20:59,720 what's going to happen. 343 00:21:06,640 --> 00:21:08,000 Here we go! 344 00:21:14,080 --> 00:21:19,040 So, I've seen several shuttle launches from two miles away. 345 00:21:19,040 --> 00:21:21,400 I've never been this close to a rocket firing, 346 00:21:21,400 --> 00:21:24,120 and it really is quite something! 347 00:21:29,720 --> 00:21:31,400 I can feel that in my chest. 348 00:21:31,400 --> 00:21:33,840 We are half a mile away from this... 349 00:21:33,840 --> 00:21:36,840 ..and you just can't help but get a sense of 350 00:21:36,840 --> 00:21:39,360 the enormous power involved here. 351 00:21:42,000 --> 00:21:45,720 The engineers are looking for anything out of the ordinary, 352 00:21:45,720 --> 00:21:49,200 like small deformations in this, the engine nozzle, 353 00:21:49,200 --> 00:21:52,240 that could lead to the engines exploding. 354 00:21:54,000 --> 00:21:57,000 Just imagine what it would be like to be an astronaut, 355 00:21:57,000 --> 00:22:00,480 sitting on top of four of those engines! 356 00:22:00,480 --> 00:22:04,280 The only fuel is hydrogen and oxygen, 357 00:22:04,280 --> 00:22:08,520 so those clouds are superheated water vapour. 358 00:22:11,760 --> 00:22:15,080 Nearly there. We are within seconds of a successful test. 359 00:22:30,160 --> 00:22:34,560 And the silence is suddenly deafening. 360 00:22:34,560 --> 00:22:36,600 That is the end of the test. 361 00:22:36,600 --> 00:22:42,440 We've had official word that that was 510 seconds of good firing. 362 00:22:42,440 --> 00:22:46,360 This is an RS25 engine working the way that it should work. 363 00:22:46,360 --> 00:22:51,960 All-essential step on the road to the next generation of mission. 364 00:22:58,960 --> 00:23:01,960 At the start of the moon programme, Nasa faced a problem, 365 00:23:01,960 --> 00:23:06,080 because the giant Saturn V rockets are assembled 366 00:23:06,080 --> 00:23:08,600 in that building, the vehicle assembly building, 367 00:23:08,600 --> 00:23:11,880 and they have to be carried from there to the launchpad, 368 00:23:11,880 --> 00:23:14,800 which is over there, about three and a half miles 369 00:23:14,800 --> 00:23:17,480 in that direction, over Florida swampland. 370 00:23:17,480 --> 00:23:21,840 And the solution they came up with was to construct the largest 371 00:23:21,840 --> 00:23:26,360 self-powered vehicle ever constructed at the time. 372 00:23:26,360 --> 00:23:29,440 And it's this. It's called the crawler. 373 00:23:32,200 --> 00:23:35,520 After Apollo, the crawlers were refitted... 374 00:23:37,600 --> 00:23:41,400 ..to continue their iconic role of transporting the space shuttle. 375 00:23:43,040 --> 00:23:47,120 A task they've performed for 135 missions. 376 00:23:50,760 --> 00:23:54,240 And in a couple of years, they are due to begin work again 377 00:23:54,240 --> 00:23:57,880 carrying the SLS rocket on the first step of its eventual 378 00:23:57,880 --> 00:23:59,760 journey back to the moon. 379 00:24:04,000 --> 00:24:07,080 I'm under the belly of the beast with crawler project manager 380 00:24:07,080 --> 00:24:09,240 John Giles. Hello, John, how are you? 381 00:24:09,240 --> 00:24:11,560 I'm fine. This is an incredible machine. 382 00:24:11,560 --> 00:24:14,320 Do you think of this as a car or a tank or what? 383 00:24:14,320 --> 00:24:17,360 A cross between a tank, 384 00:24:17,360 --> 00:24:20,120 a ship, a locomotive. 385 00:24:20,120 --> 00:24:22,200 It's a lot of pieces of equipment involved. 386 00:24:22,200 --> 00:24:24,280 It's a fairly unique piece of hardware. It's very unique. 387 00:24:24,280 --> 00:24:27,480 But it is slightly complicated, the fact that even though this looks 388 00:24:27,480 --> 00:24:30,760 lovely and flat, most of the journey isn't done completely flat. 389 00:24:30,760 --> 00:24:32,000 That's true. 390 00:24:32,000 --> 00:24:34,040 It would be wonderful if it was flat the whole way, 391 00:24:34,040 --> 00:24:37,520 but these river rock that we ride on are very uneven, 392 00:24:37,520 --> 00:24:40,200 and then once we go up the elevation to the pad, 393 00:24:40,200 --> 00:24:43,240 then we're obviously going up a five degree incline. 394 00:24:43,240 --> 00:24:45,640 OK, so hang on, I'm sorry, a five degree incline with a rocket 395 00:24:45,640 --> 00:24:49,160 on top is pretty severe. That's absolutely correct. 396 00:24:49,160 --> 00:24:52,240 So, what we do is we have a levelling system on board, 397 00:24:52,240 --> 00:24:54,760 and any time the crawler gets out of level, 398 00:24:54,760 --> 00:24:57,360 and it senses that, we will automatically send 399 00:24:57,360 --> 00:24:59,800 hydraulic fluid to one of the corners there, 400 00:24:59,800 --> 00:25:02,240 one of our jacking equalisation and levelling cylinders, 401 00:25:02,240 --> 00:25:03,880 and we'll bring that side up and down, 402 00:25:03,880 --> 00:25:05,520 so we stay level all the time. 403 00:25:05,520 --> 00:25:07,760 How much of a give can you possibly have? 404 00:25:07,760 --> 00:25:11,800 How much can you be off? Oh, it's... it's in the very small inch range. 405 00:25:11,800 --> 00:25:14,680 An inch? Yes. I'm sorry, in this entire area here, will no more, 406 00:25:14,680 --> 00:25:17,440 at any time, be an inch higher on one side than the other? 407 00:25:17,440 --> 00:25:20,960 An inch or two is what we strive for. Wow, that's incredible. 408 00:25:20,960 --> 00:25:23,760 And the other thing, of course, often it isn't the rocket 409 00:25:23,760 --> 00:25:26,240 itself that it's carrying, but it's also carrying the rocket 410 00:25:26,240 --> 00:25:28,320 and the launchpad. So, yes. 411 00:25:28,320 --> 00:25:30,480 We'll either carry, like, during the shuttle days, 412 00:25:30,480 --> 00:25:33,080 we would carry a mobile launch platform, with a shuttle on top. 413 00:25:33,080 --> 00:25:35,360 But for the new programme, for the new SLS programme, 414 00:25:35,360 --> 00:25:38,400 we'll have a mobile launch tower. Yes, and that would be on top of us. 415 00:25:38,400 --> 00:25:41,080 Weighs in 10-11 million pounds. 416 00:25:41,080 --> 00:25:43,560 And then we will throw an SLS launch vehicle on top of that. 417 00:25:43,560 --> 00:25:45,320 On top of that, right? 418 00:25:45,320 --> 00:25:47,960 Is this the easiest way to do this? 419 00:25:47,960 --> 00:25:51,240 Or is this a piece of engineering that felt like the easiest way 420 00:25:51,240 --> 00:25:53,480 back in the 1950s and '60s? 421 00:25:53,480 --> 00:25:55,560 We have been doing it for over 50 years, 422 00:25:55,560 --> 00:25:58,120 and if there was something better, we would've tried it. 423 00:25:58,120 --> 00:26:02,440 As big as we do things here, we need to do it in a very large way. 424 00:26:02,440 --> 00:26:06,680 Yes, you do. When you go to the SLS, will this still be enough, 425 00:26:06,680 --> 00:26:08,880 or do you need to...? This is it right here. 426 00:26:08,880 --> 00:26:10,720 We actually upgraded this. 427 00:26:10,720 --> 00:26:13,600 When this was designed back in the 1960s for Apollo, 428 00:26:13,600 --> 00:26:16,240 we only had to lift 12 million pounds. 429 00:26:16,240 --> 00:26:19,040 So, when they decided we were going to go and transform 430 00:26:19,040 --> 00:26:21,600 to SLS, they said, "Well, we have a new requirement for you, 431 00:26:21,600 --> 00:26:24,320 "it has to work for 18 million pounds." 432 00:26:24,320 --> 00:26:29,600 So we spent three to four years modifying the bearings, 433 00:26:29,600 --> 00:26:32,760 our hydraulic cylinders, our gel system. 434 00:26:32,760 --> 00:26:36,720 We put a new onboard generator, we put new brakes on it. 435 00:26:36,720 --> 00:26:39,200 We strengthened the steel inside of our trucks. 436 00:26:39,200 --> 00:26:41,400 We did quite a few mods, to make sure it can handle 437 00:26:41,400 --> 00:26:43,840 18 million pounds. OK, fair enough. 438 00:26:43,840 --> 00:26:45,440 Thank you very much, John. 439 00:26:52,560 --> 00:26:55,760 On July 16th, 1969, 440 00:26:55,760 --> 00:26:58,840 just 12 minutes after liftoff, 441 00:26:58,840 --> 00:27:02,120 Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin 442 00:27:02,120 --> 00:27:06,160 and Michael Collins entered a new phase of their journey... 443 00:27:08,920 --> 00:27:11,960 ..as they manoeuvred into Earth orbit. 444 00:27:17,760 --> 00:27:20,760 After one and a half laps of the Earth, 445 00:27:20,760 --> 00:27:24,160 they turned the Apollo 11 spacecraft towards the moon, 446 00:27:24,160 --> 00:27:27,280 and began their journey to this alien world. 447 00:27:28,520 --> 00:27:30,760 RADIO: Roger, Houston, Apollo 11. 448 00:27:30,760 --> 00:27:37,840 They navigated by the stars, in a spacecraft that had less computing power than a mobile phone. 449 00:27:39,680 --> 00:27:42,520 For three days, the astronauts lived, 450 00:27:42,520 --> 00:27:47,760 worked and ate within the six cubic metres of their Apollo capsule. 451 00:27:47,760 --> 00:27:49,840 We've got all kinds of good stuff. 452 00:27:49,840 --> 00:27:52,120 We've got chicken stew here. 453 00:27:52,120 --> 00:27:55,000 All you have to do is three ounces of hot water 454 00:27:55,000 --> 00:27:56,560 for five or ten minutes. 455 00:27:58,120 --> 00:28:01,840 Neil, Buzz and Michael's lives were entirely in the hands 456 00:28:01,840 --> 00:28:05,280 of the Apollo spacecraft's life-support systems. 457 00:28:08,520 --> 00:28:12,360 In the next part of the programme, we'll explore what it takes 458 00:28:12,360 --> 00:28:15,280 to survive in the vacuum of space. 459 00:28:16,480 --> 00:28:21,920 Roger, Houston. Apollo 11, calling in from about 130,000 miles out. 460 00:28:24,720 --> 00:28:28,240 And we'll reveal the latest spacecraft being built right now, 461 00:28:28,240 --> 00:28:31,680 to make life in space a reality. 462 00:28:36,160 --> 00:28:39,600 We've moved now to the very heart of the Kennedy Space Center. 463 00:28:39,600 --> 00:28:42,520 Just behind us is the very famous vehicle assembly building. 464 00:28:42,520 --> 00:28:45,480 From floor to roof, the highest single storey 465 00:28:45,480 --> 00:28:46,920 in any building in the world. 466 00:28:46,920 --> 00:28:50,440 At one stage, so huge that clouds would form in the higher 467 00:28:50,440 --> 00:28:52,600 parts of it, and it would rain down onto it. 468 00:28:52,600 --> 00:28:54,200 But it had to be that big, didn't it? 469 00:28:54,200 --> 00:28:57,280 You know, you don't get a sense of the scale of it on telly, 470 00:28:57,280 --> 00:29:01,960 but when I tell you you could fit four Saturn V rockets in there, 471 00:29:01,960 --> 00:29:04,200 and also the space shuttles were assembled in there, 472 00:29:04,200 --> 00:29:06,960 you get some sense of the scale of the thing. 473 00:29:06,960 --> 00:29:09,280 Behind us now is a building that was originally used 474 00:29:09,280 --> 00:29:11,600 for the refurbishing of shuttles between flights. 475 00:29:11,600 --> 00:29:13,400 You can see that from the shape of the door. 476 00:29:13,400 --> 00:29:16,200 You can see where the wings would be, coming out of there. 477 00:29:16,200 --> 00:29:19,040 In there, however, now, they're building the next generation 478 00:29:19,040 --> 00:29:23,080 of American spacecraft, and we have been given unprecedented access to look around. 479 00:29:23,080 --> 00:29:25,320 Yeah, as the first capsule neared completion, 480 00:29:25,320 --> 00:29:29,600 I was allowed in there to a spacecraft assembly line. 481 00:29:29,600 --> 00:29:32,000 How cool is that?! I'm going to say it again. 482 00:29:32,000 --> 00:29:35,880 A spacecraft assembly line, to see production in action. 483 00:29:43,880 --> 00:29:47,240 For almost 40 years, Nasa has been concentrating 484 00:29:47,240 --> 00:29:49,840 on missions close to home, 485 00:29:49,840 --> 00:29:52,320 like building and running the permanently occupied 486 00:29:52,320 --> 00:29:54,280 International Space Station. 487 00:29:55,400 --> 00:29:58,840 Now Nasa's focus is on deep space missions - 488 00:29:58,840 --> 00:30:02,720 flying to the moon and Mars, and hopefully beyond. 489 00:30:02,720 --> 00:30:07,160 And the strategy is to subcontract out near-Earth orbit operations 490 00:30:07,160 --> 00:30:09,800 to commercial companies, and that's why Boeing has built 491 00:30:09,800 --> 00:30:12,640 this spacecraft factory here at Kennedy. 492 00:30:14,480 --> 00:30:18,280 With a contract worth over $4.7 billion, 493 00:30:18,280 --> 00:30:22,200 they've been designing a brand-new spacecraft from scratch 494 00:30:22,200 --> 00:30:25,880 to fly on top of an Atlas V rocket. 495 00:30:25,880 --> 00:30:28,800 This is Starliner - 496 00:30:28,800 --> 00:30:31,960 Boeing's vision of a new age of space travel. 497 00:30:34,360 --> 00:30:36,200 Lewis. Hi, how are you doing? 498 00:30:36,200 --> 00:30:37,400 I'm very good, thank you. 499 00:30:37,400 --> 00:30:41,280 Lewis Aitchison is the chief engineer for Starliner's 500 00:30:41,280 --> 00:30:43,560 launch and recovery systems. 501 00:30:43,560 --> 00:30:45,440 It's an incredibly exciting time here. 502 00:30:45,440 --> 00:30:50,040 We have two of our test vehicles coming together right now. 503 00:30:50,040 --> 00:30:52,240 Over here, this is our paddleboard test vehicle, 504 00:30:52,240 --> 00:30:53,760 also known as Spacecraft 1. 505 00:30:53,760 --> 00:30:57,320 Spacecraft 2, which isn't here, is out in the factory right now 506 00:30:57,320 --> 00:31:00,200 getting tested in El Segundo, and that's Spacecraft 3. 507 00:31:00,200 --> 00:31:02,200 That'll actually be the first vehicle 508 00:31:02,200 --> 00:31:05,680 that we have on the Starliner programme that'll fly in space. 509 00:31:05,680 --> 00:31:08,520 The three Starliner spacecraft currently in production 510 00:31:08,520 --> 00:31:10,400 all have different roles. 511 00:31:10,400 --> 00:31:14,800 Spacecraft 1 is a stripped-down vehicle that will be used 512 00:31:14,800 --> 00:31:19,400 to test the abort engines that will fire to pull astronauts to safety 513 00:31:19,400 --> 00:31:21,840 if there is a problem during launch. 514 00:31:21,840 --> 00:31:26,160 Spacecraft 2 is a proving ground for construction techniques, 515 00:31:26,160 --> 00:31:29,600 and will eventually fly the first astronauts. 516 00:31:29,600 --> 00:31:32,680 And Spacecraft 3 is nearing completion - 517 00:31:32,680 --> 00:31:34,840 it's due to be the first to fly on a mission to 518 00:31:34,840 --> 00:31:39,560 the International Space Station on an uncrewed test flight in August. 519 00:31:41,000 --> 00:31:43,280 So this is a great view of the capsule, actually, 520 00:31:43,280 --> 00:31:46,280 because I suppose not many people see it without the outer skin. 521 00:31:46,280 --> 00:31:49,760 You can see the bits, the functioning objects 522 00:31:49,760 --> 00:31:52,160 in the capsule. Yeah, absolutely. 523 00:31:52,160 --> 00:31:54,440 So, what's the...? Can you talk us through it? 524 00:31:54,440 --> 00:31:56,880 What is the black square there, and the...? 525 00:31:56,880 --> 00:32:00,600 Sure, so what you're kind of looking at right now is our window. 526 00:32:00,600 --> 00:32:03,960 Off on the other side of the vehicle would be the hatch. 527 00:32:03,960 --> 00:32:07,360 You'll see quite a bit of harness for both either avionics 528 00:32:07,360 --> 00:32:09,640 or plumbing for the propulsion system. 529 00:32:09,640 --> 00:32:13,280 Up towards the top, what we would have is our Nasa docking system. 530 00:32:13,280 --> 00:32:15,800 Once you get on orbit, you'll be docking to the Space Station 531 00:32:15,800 --> 00:32:18,880 up through the top, and that's called the IVA hatch. 532 00:32:18,880 --> 00:32:24,280 And that's how the astronauts will get in and out of the International Space Station. 533 00:32:24,280 --> 00:32:28,080 Their plan is the astronauts will be using that hatch 534 00:32:28,080 --> 00:32:29,920 within the next 12 months. 535 00:32:31,000 --> 00:32:34,440 Boeing's contract with Nasa is to deliver four astronauts 536 00:32:34,440 --> 00:32:37,680 per flight to the International Space Station. 537 00:32:38,680 --> 00:32:41,520 Preparations are already advanced. 538 00:32:43,400 --> 00:32:47,000 And to find out what it's like to fly the Starliner, 539 00:32:47,000 --> 00:32:50,440 we sent Doctor Hannah Fry to Houston, Texas. 540 00:32:53,240 --> 00:32:58,240 Deep within Johnson Space Center is building nine, 541 00:32:58,240 --> 00:33:02,920 where astronauts prepare for space. 542 00:33:02,920 --> 00:33:08,160 Since the 1980s, every single Nasa astronaut has walked 543 00:33:08,160 --> 00:33:13,720 along this floor and climbed into one of these mock-up space vehicles. 544 00:33:13,720 --> 00:33:16,200 And the thousands of hours that they spend in these trainers 545 00:33:16,200 --> 00:33:18,920 is absolutely essential. 546 00:33:18,920 --> 00:33:22,720 Every procedure has to be practised and perfected 547 00:33:22,720 --> 00:33:25,120 until it's second nature. 548 00:33:25,120 --> 00:33:27,840 And today, I get to have a go. 549 00:33:29,280 --> 00:33:34,360 One of the first people to fly Starliner when it launches in 2020 550 00:33:34,360 --> 00:33:37,600 will be astronaut Sunita Williams. 551 00:33:37,600 --> 00:33:43,200 She's a veteran of the space shuttle, and Soyuz capsule. 552 00:33:43,200 --> 00:33:47,160 I was interested to see if she had a preference. 553 00:33:47,160 --> 00:33:48,760 Both are different, right? 554 00:33:48,760 --> 00:33:50,760 The shuttle is like a pick-up truck. 555 00:33:50,760 --> 00:33:53,040 You know, we were in the middle of the construction of the space 556 00:33:53,040 --> 00:33:55,880 station, and then the Soyuz is more like a little sports car. 557 00:33:55,880 --> 00:33:59,280 This will be our newer sports car, so it'll be a lot of fun 558 00:33:59,280 --> 00:34:00,480 to fly this one. 559 00:34:02,160 --> 00:34:04,200 So, first open the hatch. 560 00:34:05,840 --> 00:34:08,280 Right here, and there it is. 561 00:34:08,280 --> 00:34:11,960 Put your hands, put your legs, and then put your butt... 562 00:34:11,960 --> 00:34:13,960 ..right over here. OK. 563 00:34:13,960 --> 00:34:15,600 And then scoot yourself right in. 564 00:34:15,600 --> 00:34:18,240 Now just keep coming over. Wow. 565 00:34:18,240 --> 00:34:21,480 It's actually bigger on the inside than it looks. 566 00:34:21,480 --> 00:34:28,640 The Starliner can carry up to seven astronauts in relative comfort. 567 00:34:28,640 --> 00:34:31,960 How does this compare to the Soyuz when you're inside it? 568 00:34:31,960 --> 00:34:34,480 It's nice to have a big old window right here. 569 00:34:34,480 --> 00:34:36,320 Do you not have one in Soyuz? 570 00:34:36,320 --> 00:34:39,520 We have little windows on the side, but this is a nice window 571 00:34:39,520 --> 00:34:41,680 where you can actually look at the Space Station 572 00:34:41,680 --> 00:34:43,440 as you're coming close to it. 573 00:34:43,440 --> 00:34:47,600 Soyuz is an amazing spacecraft, but this is a step up. 574 00:34:47,600 --> 00:34:51,120 You feel like, also, everything is right in front of you, 575 00:34:51,120 --> 00:34:52,640 right where you can reach it. 576 00:34:52,640 --> 00:34:55,080 It's not spread way out around the cockpit 577 00:34:55,080 --> 00:34:58,040 like the shuttle is. It was extremely huge, 578 00:34:58,040 --> 00:35:00,480 and one person couldn't drive it. 579 00:35:00,480 --> 00:35:03,040 This one actually, one person is supposed to be able 580 00:35:03,040 --> 00:35:05,960 to do everything, that's all because of the automation that's 581 00:35:05,960 --> 00:35:08,800 involved into this very modern spacecraft. 582 00:35:11,240 --> 00:35:14,320 And how does it feel knowing that you're going to be one 583 00:35:14,320 --> 00:35:16,520 of the first people to fly this thing? 584 00:35:16,520 --> 00:35:18,920 It's cool. It's really exciting. 585 00:35:18,920 --> 00:35:22,000 I mean, I feel very vested in it, and I feel, you know, 586 00:35:22,000 --> 00:35:25,400 talking to all the engineers and people and technicians 587 00:35:25,400 --> 00:35:28,560 who are putting it together, I feel super confident with it, too. 588 00:35:28,560 --> 00:35:30,760 So I'm psyched. 589 00:35:30,760 --> 00:35:34,480 I'm about to find out what it will be like to fly 590 00:35:34,480 --> 00:35:38,480 Starliner, in a craft used to train the astronauts. 591 00:35:38,480 --> 00:35:42,120 One of the critical procedures they must all learn 592 00:35:42,120 --> 00:35:45,800 is how to dock with the ISS. 593 00:35:45,800 --> 00:35:50,480 Simulator designer Jim Keil will put me through my paces. 594 00:35:50,480 --> 00:35:52,880 The first thing we will do is turn on manual control. 595 00:35:52,880 --> 00:35:54,480 That's this one up here? Up? 596 00:35:54,480 --> 00:35:56,720 Yes. It is a live joystick now. 597 00:35:56,720 --> 00:35:59,040 You will push it in the direction you want the spacecraft to go. 598 00:35:59,040 --> 00:36:01,400 So if you want to move forward, you're going to push it straight in. 599 00:36:01,400 --> 00:36:03,240 So let's go ahead and push it straight in. 600 00:36:05,080 --> 00:36:09,400 During a real-life docking, both Starliner and the ISS 601 00:36:09,400 --> 00:36:14,760 will be hurtling around the Earth at 17,500 miles per hour. 602 00:36:14,760 --> 00:36:19,680 Under normal circumstances it would be computer-controlled, 603 00:36:19,680 --> 00:36:24,800 but astronauts must be able to take over if something goes wrong. 604 00:36:26,120 --> 00:36:30,080 This pink circle is your target. OK? 605 00:36:30,080 --> 00:36:34,040 So, actually, this is quite like you are getting these discrete bursts. 606 00:36:34,040 --> 00:36:35,800 Yes, it is pulses of the thrusters, 607 00:36:35,800 --> 00:36:38,320 as opposed to pushing the gas pedal on a car. OK. 608 00:36:40,040 --> 00:36:46,280 In the past, astronauts were confronted with a mind-boggling array of switches. 609 00:36:46,280 --> 00:36:49,720 Apollo and Soyuz had hundreds, 610 00:36:49,720 --> 00:36:54,240 and the Space Shuttle had about 3,000. 611 00:36:56,240 --> 00:36:59,720 Starliner's cockpit has been simplified, 612 00:36:59,720 --> 00:37:02,560 reducing the number to around 50. 613 00:37:03,800 --> 00:37:09,480 Fewer buttons means fewer switches that a crew member has to memorise and know how to use. 614 00:37:09,480 --> 00:37:14,520 That is fewer distractions while they are actually trying to get their job done. 615 00:37:14,520 --> 00:37:18,200 The streamlining of Starliner's cockpit means that I am able 616 00:37:18,200 --> 00:37:22,440 to control the entire docking process through a single hand controller. 617 00:37:24,520 --> 00:37:28,840 And the screens in front of me don't just show me where I am now - 618 00:37:28,840 --> 00:37:32,520 they also show me where I'll be in a few seconds' time... 619 00:37:33,640 --> 00:37:37,080 ..making the docking process more intuitive. 620 00:37:38,320 --> 00:37:42,200 OK, so, we are getting close. Coming up to the 1m mark. 621 00:37:42,200 --> 00:37:47,280 Although you are hurtling around the Earth around 17,500 mph, 20,000 kph. 622 00:37:47,280 --> 00:37:51,840 Relative to the Space Station, we want about, you know, that 4cm, a few inches per second. 623 00:37:51,840 --> 00:37:55,160 That's absolutely mad. Yeah, it's a highly choreographed dance. 624 00:37:55,160 --> 00:37:57,680 But we'd like to keep both the Space Station and Starliner 625 00:37:57,680 --> 00:37:59,200 intact when we dock. OK. 626 00:37:59,200 --> 00:38:01,440 All right, when you get to the middle point, 627 00:38:01,440 --> 00:38:03,880 let's go ahead and give it upward pulse. Upward. 628 00:38:03,880 --> 00:38:05,200 We have got contact. Ooh! 629 00:38:05,200 --> 00:38:07,560 And capture! Hey, successful docking. 630 00:38:07,560 --> 00:38:10,000 So, how far off was I? 631 00:38:10,000 --> 00:38:13,080 You were under a centimetre from the centre. 632 00:38:14,480 --> 00:38:17,240 I think that's just an excellent display of skill, then. 633 00:38:17,240 --> 00:38:18,920 I think so. 634 00:38:18,920 --> 00:38:23,440 Parking's generally not my forte, but I did just manage to dock 635 00:38:23,440 --> 00:38:26,240 at the ISS successfully without mucking it up. 636 00:38:26,240 --> 00:38:28,880 So, pretty pleased with myself. 637 00:38:30,800 --> 00:38:34,760 Although I suspect it says a lot more about how well 638 00:38:34,760 --> 00:38:38,840 they've streamlined the controls, and simplified the process to make 639 00:38:38,840 --> 00:38:42,680 it instinctive, than it does my skills as an astronaut. 640 00:38:51,480 --> 00:38:55,080 Not only have Boeing worked to make sure that the Starliner is as easy 641 00:38:55,080 --> 00:38:58,840 as possible to pilot, Lewis Aitchison and his team 642 00:38:58,840 --> 00:39:02,200 have also put a huge effort into designing this spacecraft 643 00:39:02,200 --> 00:39:06,480 to be much cheaper to fly than anything that has gone before. 644 00:39:08,720 --> 00:39:12,760 I think one of the big differences between this and Apollo is reusability. 645 00:39:12,760 --> 00:39:15,440 The Apollo capsule, once it flew one time, that was it. 646 00:39:15,440 --> 00:39:19,880 You typically see the Apollo capsules in museums after they were flown. 647 00:39:19,880 --> 00:39:23,120 This particular vehicle is designed to fly up to ten times. 648 00:39:23,120 --> 00:39:27,160 So, what are the design choices that mean that you can re-use it? 649 00:39:27,160 --> 00:39:29,280 The biggest thing is where we land. 650 00:39:29,280 --> 00:39:31,640 So, one of the neat things about this programme, 651 00:39:31,640 --> 00:39:34,120 is this will be the first US capsule to land on land. 652 00:39:34,120 --> 00:39:37,080 That's a really important design choice, because as you can imagine, 653 00:39:37,080 --> 00:39:40,160 saltwater wreaks havoc on electronics, metal, 654 00:39:40,160 --> 00:39:41,520 anything it touches, really. 655 00:39:44,040 --> 00:39:48,240 The challenge of landing on solid ground instead of water 656 00:39:48,240 --> 00:39:49,880 is how to soften the impact. 657 00:39:49,880 --> 00:39:51,680 RADIO: And touchdown. 658 00:39:52,800 --> 00:39:56,320 The Russian Soyuz capsule uses explosive retro rockets, 659 00:39:56,320 --> 00:39:58,480 that fire just before touchdown 660 00:39:58,480 --> 00:40:00,680 to reduce the speed at impact. 661 00:40:02,160 --> 00:40:05,160 But Starliner is taking a different approach, 662 00:40:05,160 --> 00:40:09,080 using a system we're familiar with in cars - airbags. 663 00:40:10,840 --> 00:40:14,120 But it's not as simple as just pumping them up. 664 00:40:15,720 --> 00:40:19,280 So, here is the Starliner, and it's going to land, 665 00:40:19,280 --> 00:40:21,880 and here are two airbags, both at the same pressure 666 00:40:21,880 --> 00:40:24,640 at the moment, and no air can escape. 667 00:40:24,640 --> 00:40:27,920 The bungs - the stoppers - are in, if you like. 668 00:40:27,920 --> 00:40:31,160 And so let's drop the spacecraft and see what happens. 669 00:40:32,800 --> 00:40:34,200 You see? 670 00:40:34,200 --> 00:40:37,480 If both airbags are inflated, and the gases, 671 00:40:37,480 --> 00:40:42,120 which are the oxygen and nitrogen in this case, can't escape, 672 00:40:42,120 --> 00:40:44,200 then the spacecraft bounces. 673 00:40:44,200 --> 00:40:48,960 So, the solution to that was have this rather more subtle system, 674 00:40:48,960 --> 00:40:51,680 and the key point is the outer airbag, 675 00:40:51,680 --> 00:40:55,400 the slightly lower-pressure one, is vented. 676 00:40:55,400 --> 00:40:58,280 So now, see what happens when we drop the spacecraft. 677 00:41:00,000 --> 00:41:02,360 It lands, and it doesn't bounce. 678 00:41:02,360 --> 00:41:06,160 And that is why this double airbag system is employed. 679 00:41:08,600 --> 00:41:12,400 Starliner's new landing system has been tested rigorously. 680 00:41:15,640 --> 00:41:17,800 It's been dropped from cranes... 681 00:41:17,800 --> 00:41:18,880 Release! 682 00:41:20,880 --> 00:41:22,760 ..dropped into water... 683 00:41:26,240 --> 00:41:28,240 ..dropped at angles... 684 00:41:28,240 --> 00:41:31,200 ..even dropped from helicopters 685 00:41:31,200 --> 00:41:34,160 in an attempt to make every landing 686 00:41:34,160 --> 00:41:35,960 as safe as possible. 687 00:41:38,520 --> 00:41:41,440 This spacecraft has only got a few months of assembly left. 688 00:41:41,440 --> 00:41:44,080 They said it comes together very quickly, actually. 689 00:41:44,080 --> 00:41:46,920 They just have to bolt the panels on and then it will launch 690 00:41:46,920 --> 00:41:50,200 from here at Kennedy, will fly to the International Space Station, 691 00:41:50,200 --> 00:41:52,280 it will dock, then it will return to Earth, 692 00:41:52,280 --> 00:41:57,280 it will be refurbished, and its next flight will carry a crew into space. 693 00:42:02,800 --> 00:42:07,040 Outside the capsule, space is a forbidding, hostile environment. 694 00:42:07,040 --> 00:42:10,160 Everything is constantly bombarded by radiation from the sun. 695 00:42:10,160 --> 00:42:12,600 The tiniest leak in a suit could be fatal. 696 00:42:12,600 --> 00:42:16,640 Temperatures veer wildly from 138 degrees in sunlight, 697 00:42:16,640 --> 00:42:20,040 to -173 degrees in the shade. 698 00:42:20,040 --> 00:42:21,800 It is a tough place. 699 00:42:21,800 --> 00:42:24,080 Yet, here on Earth, we're surrounded by air. 700 00:42:24,080 --> 00:42:26,040 It's like sitting in a hot bath. 701 00:42:26,040 --> 00:42:28,360 And that protects us from these temperature swings. 702 00:42:28,360 --> 00:42:31,600 If the sun goes behind a cloud, we don't immediately freeze. 703 00:42:31,600 --> 00:42:34,080 But in space, we're not surrounded by anything. 704 00:42:34,080 --> 00:42:38,120 So if you go into the shade, the solar panel, or a space station module, 705 00:42:38,120 --> 00:42:42,440 the temperature swing can be anything up to 300 degrees Celsius. 706 00:42:46,440 --> 00:42:49,720 Venturing outside the protection of a spacecraft is 707 00:42:49,720 --> 00:42:52,360 one of the riskiest parts of any mission. 708 00:42:52,360 --> 00:42:56,400 But for routine maintenance, or in case of an emergency, 709 00:42:56,400 --> 00:42:59,800 it's something astronauts must prepare for. 710 00:43:01,440 --> 00:43:06,120 So, before their mission, they must all undergo around 400 hours 711 00:43:06,120 --> 00:43:10,080 of spacewalk training in places like the neutral buoyancy tank, 712 00:43:10,080 --> 00:43:14,680 which can get them close to the near weightless conditions of space. 713 00:43:18,360 --> 00:43:21,000 But at Johnson Space Center in Houston, 714 00:43:21,000 --> 00:43:24,840 they've devised a new way to simulate spacewalks. 715 00:43:24,840 --> 00:43:27,880 Doctor Kevin Fong has been trying it out. 716 00:43:30,120 --> 00:43:34,960 This is Nasa's most advanced astronaut training device. 717 00:43:35,920 --> 00:43:37,040 Argos. 718 00:43:38,880 --> 00:43:42,320 The Active Response Gravity Offload System. 719 00:43:42,320 --> 00:43:45,360 It can create the sensation of weightlessness, 720 00:43:45,360 --> 00:43:49,680 so astronauts can practise complex manoeuvres like spacewalks. 721 00:43:50,880 --> 00:43:53,640 All right, Stell, let's go ahead and enable vertical. 722 00:43:53,640 --> 00:43:55,920 Wow, here we go. 723 00:43:55,920 --> 00:43:58,080 Now we have liftoff. 724 00:43:58,080 --> 00:44:01,240 It's an array of computers, sensors and motors 725 00:44:01,240 --> 00:44:04,480 that work together to dial out Earth's gravity. 726 00:44:07,240 --> 00:44:10,320 It's much, much more difficult to control 727 00:44:10,320 --> 00:44:12,520 than I imagined. 728 00:44:12,520 --> 00:44:14,840 So, you're now in microgravity. 729 00:44:14,840 --> 00:44:17,440 To give you a taste of what a real spacewalk might be like, 730 00:44:17,440 --> 00:44:20,080 I'm going to give you a little bit of a circuit, and your mission 731 00:44:20,080 --> 00:44:21,720 is to eventually get back here, 732 00:44:21,720 --> 00:44:24,480 and fix this electrical junction box. 733 00:44:24,480 --> 00:44:28,280 A tiny finger movement like that, I'm going to push on that finger, 734 00:44:28,280 --> 00:44:31,280 and that's me going, and I'm nearly off that handle. 735 00:44:31,280 --> 00:44:33,360 So, let's try and get over there. 736 00:44:33,360 --> 00:44:36,760 As I try to make my way down the length of the training rig, 737 00:44:36,760 --> 00:44:39,920 every movement I make is picked up by the sensors. 738 00:44:39,920 --> 00:44:44,080 Motors change the tension of the cables I'm attached to, 739 00:44:44,080 --> 00:44:45,720 neutralising my weight, 740 00:44:45,720 --> 00:44:51,280 so I'm interacting with my surroundings as though I'm in space. 741 00:44:51,280 --> 00:44:54,360 So, all these handrails are very similar to the ones 742 00:44:54,360 --> 00:44:56,920 you'll see up on the Space Station. 743 00:44:58,200 --> 00:45:01,280 Right. Now I need to get back down. 744 00:45:01,280 --> 00:45:03,960 And so, you're expecting gravity to help you here, 745 00:45:03,960 --> 00:45:07,840 but there is no gravity. You've cancelled it out, so... 746 00:45:07,840 --> 00:45:11,880 You just... Every movement is you, it's all you. 747 00:45:11,880 --> 00:45:14,720 Adjusting to weightlessness is difficult. 748 00:45:14,720 --> 00:45:18,920 And it's all because of Newton's laws of motion. 749 00:45:18,920 --> 00:45:22,720 His first law says that a moving object will keep moving, 750 00:45:22,720 --> 00:45:25,360 unless something stops it. 751 00:45:25,360 --> 00:45:28,480 On Earth, friction quickly slows things down. 752 00:45:28,480 --> 00:45:32,440 But in the vacuum of space, there is no friction. 753 00:45:32,440 --> 00:45:36,480 So unless there's something to stop me, I just keep moving. 754 00:45:36,480 --> 00:45:38,800 OK, I'm going to get down. 755 00:45:38,800 --> 00:45:40,480 Stop messing around. 756 00:45:40,480 --> 00:45:43,600 Just as critical is Newton's third law. 757 00:45:43,600 --> 00:45:48,480 For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. 758 00:45:48,480 --> 00:45:51,480 We don't usually notice this effect when we're moving 759 00:45:51,480 --> 00:45:53,960 around here on Earth. 760 00:45:53,960 --> 00:45:57,400 But in microgravity, even the tiniest action 761 00:45:57,400 --> 00:45:59,920 has a knock-on effect on my body. 762 00:45:59,920 --> 00:46:03,600 Let's get across. OK, I am at the business end. 763 00:46:03,600 --> 00:46:06,160 Now I'm torn between letting go of the hose, 764 00:46:06,160 --> 00:46:08,320 and letting go of the Space Station, 765 00:46:08,320 --> 00:46:11,440 both of which are pretty catastrophic. There you go. 766 00:46:11,440 --> 00:46:14,280 So, I think all the electricity is working again. 767 00:46:14,280 --> 00:46:16,920 Good. All right, well, the Space Station is safe. 768 00:46:18,800 --> 00:46:22,160 On a real spacewalk, the greatest fear is becoming 769 00:46:22,160 --> 00:46:24,800 separated from the Space Station 770 00:46:24,800 --> 00:46:27,040 and being lost in space. 771 00:46:30,680 --> 00:46:34,240 It might be difficult to understand how easy this is to get wrong, 772 00:46:34,240 --> 00:46:36,440 but if I stop now, I'm gone. 773 00:46:36,440 --> 00:46:40,600 And the thing is about space is, you fall off, and you fall forever. 774 00:46:40,600 --> 00:46:42,240 Just keep floating. 775 00:46:43,520 --> 00:46:46,760 Making mistakes has huge consequences. 776 00:46:46,760 --> 00:46:48,480 For me, I'm lucky. 777 00:46:48,480 --> 00:46:52,640 My friends over there can turn gravity on any time I like. 778 00:46:52,640 --> 00:46:57,320 But on a real spacewalk, it's a different story. 779 00:46:57,320 --> 00:47:01,560 Astronauts are equipped with a small jetpack, 780 00:47:01,560 --> 00:47:04,440 but its limited fuel means they only have one chance 781 00:47:04,440 --> 00:47:05,920 to get back. 782 00:47:07,320 --> 00:47:10,040 If that failed, they would keep drifting, 783 00:47:10,040 --> 00:47:13,960 until their spacesuit's life-support systems shut down, 784 00:47:13,960 --> 00:47:17,200 and their oxygen ran out. 785 00:47:20,560 --> 00:47:25,120 Space is a brutal and unforgiving environment. 786 00:47:25,120 --> 00:47:28,000 But we have built a home there. 787 00:47:28,000 --> 00:47:32,040 The International Space Station is one of the greatest engineering 788 00:47:32,040 --> 00:47:34,120 achievements of all time. 789 00:47:38,960 --> 00:47:44,240 This laboratory has been bringing us new science for over 18 years. 790 00:47:46,080 --> 00:47:50,320 On board, they've studied the effect of microgravity on everything, 791 00:47:50,320 --> 00:47:52,760 from growing plants... 792 00:47:52,760 --> 00:47:54,800 ..to the human body. 793 00:47:58,680 --> 00:48:01,400 Vital knowledge, if we are to explore 794 00:48:01,400 --> 00:48:03,360 the solar system. 795 00:48:03,360 --> 00:48:07,400 But the Space Station wouldn't exist without one of the most complex 796 00:48:07,400 --> 00:48:10,400 spacecraft ever built - 797 00:48:10,400 --> 00:48:15,000 Nasa's space shuttle, which first launched in 1981. 798 00:48:17,960 --> 00:48:23,800 Five shuttles flew to space, including this - Atlantis. 799 00:48:26,360 --> 00:48:29,120 And the presentation of Atlantis here, is, 800 00:48:29,120 --> 00:48:31,560 for a machine this size, is nothing short of poetic. 801 00:48:31,560 --> 00:48:34,040 Floating here as if in orbit. 802 00:48:34,040 --> 00:48:37,240 But still, with all the bumps, scrapes and scorch marks 803 00:48:37,240 --> 00:48:40,720 that it would've gained over its 33 exits from Earth, 804 00:48:40,720 --> 00:48:44,000 and moreover its 33 re-entries into Earth's atmosphere. 805 00:48:44,000 --> 00:48:46,400 Yeah, if you think about what this spacecraft did, 806 00:48:46,400 --> 00:48:49,240 it re-entered the Earth's atmosphere at about 17,000 mph. 807 00:48:49,240 --> 00:48:51,760 Those black tiles there would have glowed 808 00:48:51,760 --> 00:48:57,160 about 1,600 degrees Celsius, as the frictional heating from the atmosphere slowed it down. 809 00:48:57,160 --> 00:49:01,400 And we are joined by Nicole Stott, and Nicole spent 104 days in space. 810 00:49:01,400 --> 00:49:03,440 And you flew on this ship as well, didn't you? 811 00:49:03,440 --> 00:49:05,880 I did. It was my ride home from my first flight. 812 00:49:05,880 --> 00:49:08,480 What's the primary difference between this, obviously 813 00:49:08,480 --> 00:49:12,800 the scale of it, but flying on a shuttle compared to flying on a capsule? 814 00:49:12,800 --> 00:49:16,280 So, the difference is that on Soyuz or some 815 00:49:16,280 --> 00:49:19,440 of the new capsules coming along, you're not going to have this, like, 816 00:49:19,440 --> 00:49:22,960 ginormous cargo capacity that you did on the space shuttle. 817 00:49:22,960 --> 00:49:26,840 There are two rubber arms on this shuttle. Yeah. 818 00:49:26,840 --> 00:49:30,280 Yeah, so this one here, the Canada arm, 819 00:49:30,280 --> 00:49:34,160 is the one we used as like the primary robotic system. 820 00:49:34,160 --> 00:49:36,720 So, like the big crane on the space shuttle, 821 00:49:36,720 --> 00:49:38,800 and it could grab things and move stuff around. 822 00:49:38,800 --> 00:49:41,760 We would have a special attachment that you could stick your feet in 823 00:49:41,760 --> 00:49:44,840 and move around, and that was one of the most surreal things 824 00:49:44,840 --> 00:49:47,560 that I got to do on my mission was I got to grab this, 825 00:49:47,560 --> 00:49:50,160 what, on the ground, would have been like 800lb, 826 00:49:50,160 --> 00:49:53,200 you know, box, off the end of the station, 827 00:49:53,200 --> 00:49:56,080 and then I got flown down into the payload bay, 828 00:49:56,080 --> 00:50:00,360 kind of the back end of the space shuttle, to put it in there. 829 00:50:00,360 --> 00:50:03,440 I never felt like I was moving. It was like I was standing still 830 00:50:03,440 --> 00:50:06,720 on the ground, and the shuttle moved out of view, 831 00:50:06,720 --> 00:50:08,600 Earth moved into the view, station... 832 00:50:08,600 --> 00:50:12,760 I mean, it was like everything was revolving around me, as it does, but... 833 00:50:12,760 --> 00:50:18,240 Just the most peaceful, try not to fall asleep, kind of thing. 834 00:50:18,240 --> 00:50:21,640 What was it like landing in this? Because it's very different. 835 00:50:21,640 --> 00:50:23,880 Capsules obviously come down, they burn up, 836 00:50:23,880 --> 00:50:26,880 and then there's a big thunderous impact at some point. Yeah. 837 00:50:26,880 --> 00:50:30,360 It was just this graceful, peaceful, 838 00:50:30,360 --> 00:50:33,560 like, movement back to the ground, 839 00:50:33,560 --> 00:50:36,480 and then, you know, I always joke, that the way human beings 840 00:50:36,480 --> 00:50:38,360 should land coming home from space, 841 00:50:38,360 --> 00:50:41,800 with that little chirp on the runway, and the roll-out to wheel stop. 842 00:50:41,800 --> 00:50:46,760 You know, it's just this really peaceful, graceful thing, coming home. 843 00:50:48,040 --> 00:50:51,160 Nasa's plan now looks to me like the moon, 844 00:50:51,160 --> 00:50:52,960 and then perhaps onward to Mars. 845 00:50:52,960 --> 00:50:56,640 I'm a moon person. I love the fact that we're looking at the moon, 846 00:50:56,640 --> 00:50:59,040 this, you know, kind of naturally purpose-built 847 00:50:59,040 --> 00:51:01,640 space station in space for us already, 848 00:51:01,640 --> 00:51:04,920 as a destination that's not just a destination, 849 00:51:04,920 --> 00:51:07,520 but a place where we'll have a permanent settlement there. 850 00:51:07,520 --> 00:51:10,000 So, the moon, it may be the moon next. 851 00:51:10,000 --> 00:51:12,360 I would love to go to the moon, yeah! 852 00:51:12,360 --> 00:51:14,960 Who wouldn't love to go to the moon? I mean, really! 853 00:51:14,960 --> 00:51:17,520 Mars not so much, I think, but the moon, yeah, yeah. 854 00:51:17,520 --> 00:51:20,000 I mean, I'm just saying, I'm very busy... 855 00:51:20,000 --> 00:51:23,000 LAUGHTER Yeah. Mars is a bit of a commitment! 856 00:51:23,000 --> 00:51:24,640 Nicole, a pleasure, thank you very much. 857 00:51:24,640 --> 00:51:26,440 Thank you very much. Appreciate it. 858 00:51:26,440 --> 00:51:29,320 Now, one thing that hasn't changed since the Apollo missions 859 00:51:29,320 --> 00:51:32,360 is the need to keep astronauts in peak physical condition, 860 00:51:32,360 --> 00:51:34,400 and food is a huge part of that. 861 00:51:34,400 --> 00:51:38,600 But what's served to them and how it's served has changed dramatically. 862 00:51:38,600 --> 00:51:42,080 We sent Kevin Fong to Houston to find out what's on the menu. 863 00:51:45,800 --> 00:51:50,000 The Space Food Systems Laboratory at Nasa's Johnson Space Center 864 00:51:50,000 --> 00:51:54,280 is possibly the most exclusive kitchen in the world. 865 00:51:54,280 --> 00:51:58,120 Here, they use unique cooking methods to prepare meals 866 00:51:58,120 --> 00:51:59,560 for just six people, 867 00:51:59,560 --> 00:52:03,920 that cost over £5,000 each. 868 00:52:03,920 --> 00:52:07,480 Ryan Dowdy is the Food Systems Manager 869 00:52:07,480 --> 00:52:10,120 for the International Space Station. 870 00:52:11,760 --> 00:52:14,600 We can't do any cooking like this in space. 871 00:52:14,600 --> 00:52:15,600 Tell me why. 872 00:52:15,600 --> 00:52:18,880 There's no cooking in space, and the reason for that is 873 00:52:18,880 --> 00:52:21,080 because space is a very controlled environment. 874 00:52:21,080 --> 00:52:23,120 If they have hot water floating around inside 875 00:52:23,120 --> 00:52:25,840 the International Space Station, someone's going to get burned, 876 00:52:25,840 --> 00:52:28,400 or the electronics equipment is going to get messed up. 877 00:52:28,400 --> 00:52:31,040 That's why all the cooking we do for space happens right here. 878 00:52:33,120 --> 00:52:38,560 They've been preparing food for space here in Houston for well over 50 years. 879 00:52:38,560 --> 00:52:43,880 John Glenn became the first American to dine in orbit in 1962. 880 00:52:43,880 --> 00:52:46,480 His modest meal was a sugar tablet, 881 00:52:46,480 --> 00:52:49,920 water, and a tube of apple sauce. 882 00:52:51,600 --> 00:52:55,440 The duration of Glenn's mission was less than five hours, 883 00:52:55,440 --> 00:52:57,840 so his life didn't depend upon it. 884 00:52:59,280 --> 00:53:01,200 Oh, excellent. 885 00:53:01,200 --> 00:53:05,840 But today's missions to the Space Station can last up to a year. 886 00:53:05,840 --> 00:53:09,920 And that means astronaut food needs to be nutritious, 887 00:53:09,920 --> 00:53:12,280 and made safe to eat in space. 888 00:53:13,560 --> 00:53:16,320 So, Ryan, very noisy in here. 889 00:53:16,320 --> 00:53:19,600 And inside this machine, you've got the most elaborately 890 00:53:19,600 --> 00:53:22,680 prepared porridge and raisins I've ever seen. 891 00:53:22,680 --> 00:53:24,880 This is where we freeze-dry food to send up 892 00:53:24,880 --> 00:53:27,160 to the International Space Station. 893 00:53:27,160 --> 00:53:29,920 First we freeze it, and then we pull a vacuum on it, 894 00:53:29,920 --> 00:53:32,280 so all the water molecules are a solid, 895 00:53:32,280 --> 00:53:34,480 and they evaporate out into a gas. 896 00:53:34,480 --> 00:53:37,160 So it pulls all the moisture out of the foods in about 897 00:53:37,160 --> 00:53:38,640 a week-long process. 898 00:53:38,640 --> 00:53:40,520 Foods are about 90% water, 899 00:53:40,520 --> 00:53:43,720 so you see about a 90% weight reduction in the food 900 00:53:43,720 --> 00:53:45,200 as it's freeze-dried. 901 00:53:45,200 --> 00:53:48,640 And so this isn't fundamentally about making the food cold, 902 00:53:48,640 --> 00:53:51,880 it's about making it dry and removing the moisture, 903 00:53:51,880 --> 00:53:53,920 so that doesn't allow any bacteria to grow. 904 00:53:53,920 --> 00:53:55,680 It's pulling the water out of it, 905 00:53:55,680 --> 00:53:58,800 so the food can last a long time at room temperature. 906 00:53:58,800 --> 00:54:02,640 So, the key to stabilising food for space is reducing the risk 907 00:54:02,640 --> 00:54:06,920 of bacterial growth, while keeping its nutritional value. 908 00:54:06,920 --> 00:54:09,160 ASTRONAUT: Coming out pretty well, there. There we go. 909 00:54:09,160 --> 00:54:12,640 In space, the amount of weight that the bones must support 910 00:54:12,640 --> 00:54:17,080 is reduced to almost zero, and this causes them to weaken. 911 00:54:17,080 --> 00:54:22,320 So a diet containing calcium and vitamin D is even more important 912 00:54:22,320 --> 00:54:25,800 than on Earth, to help maintain bone strength. 913 00:54:25,800 --> 00:54:29,360 Low gravity can also reduce the number of astronauts' 914 00:54:29,360 --> 00:54:33,480 oxygen-carrying red blood cells, so they don't need as much iron 915 00:54:33,480 --> 00:54:35,160 in their diet. 916 00:54:35,160 --> 00:54:38,080 Excess iron can cause nausea and vomiting, 917 00:54:38,080 --> 00:54:42,520 and, if left unchecked, could damage the liver and heart. 918 00:54:45,560 --> 00:54:48,960 So, carefully tailored nutrition is essential. 919 00:54:48,960 --> 00:54:51,640 But what about the flavour? 920 00:54:51,640 --> 00:54:54,480 One of the crew-member favourites is the shrimp cocktail. 921 00:54:54,480 --> 00:54:58,720 Let's give it a try. OK... OK. 922 00:54:58,720 --> 00:55:03,800 So, what we're going to do here is take 75 ml of cold water, 923 00:55:03,800 --> 00:55:08,480 so the freeze-dried shrimp will take the water, 924 00:55:08,480 --> 00:55:10,520 become reconstituted. 925 00:55:10,520 --> 00:55:13,960 Let's give it a go. So, scissors across here. 926 00:55:13,960 --> 00:55:17,600 There's a bit of me that's a little bit hesitant about this! 927 00:55:21,480 --> 00:55:23,280 Mmm! 928 00:55:23,280 --> 00:55:25,400 That is actually pretty good. 929 00:55:25,400 --> 00:55:29,400 Tastes like shrimp cocktail. Mmm. It has got a bit of a kick. 930 00:55:29,400 --> 00:55:32,040 You can taste the horseradish in that. Mm-hm. 931 00:55:32,040 --> 00:55:34,520 I remember the astronaut crews saying that they like stuff 932 00:55:34,520 --> 00:55:38,480 with a bit of heat, because they have trouble tasting 933 00:55:38,480 --> 00:55:41,000 anything, really, in orbit, because the fluid shifts 934 00:55:41,000 --> 00:55:44,040 into their head, makes their noses a bit stuffy, 935 00:55:44,040 --> 00:55:46,400 you know, makes you feel the way you do when you have a cold, 936 00:55:46,400 --> 00:55:49,080 so, sometimes tasting the food is a bit difficult. 937 00:55:49,080 --> 00:55:52,160 That's right. Hot sauce, wasabi and horseradish 938 00:55:52,160 --> 00:55:54,680 are all perennial favourites. 939 00:55:54,680 --> 00:55:56,640 These are great, because they interact 940 00:55:56,640 --> 00:55:58,680 with the trigeminal nerve in the mouth, 941 00:55:58,680 --> 00:56:01,480 and they don't have to pass into the nose to be perceived. 942 00:56:01,480 --> 00:56:04,760 I am impressed with your cooking skills. This is really good stuff. 943 00:56:04,760 --> 00:56:06,080 Glad you like it. 944 00:56:16,240 --> 00:56:18,560 Food might seem like a very small consideration 945 00:56:18,560 --> 00:56:21,560 when you're looking at rockets and radiation, 946 00:56:21,560 --> 00:56:24,360 but if we're going to go to the moon and beyond to Mars, 947 00:56:24,360 --> 00:56:26,560 we're going to have to get this right, 948 00:56:26,560 --> 00:56:28,400 because the comfort that it brings, 949 00:56:28,400 --> 00:56:31,360 the boost to the crew's morale is all-important. 950 00:56:31,360 --> 00:56:35,240 If we want to keep our astronauts healthy in body and mind, 951 00:56:35,240 --> 00:56:38,400 getting the science of this right is going to be as essential 952 00:56:38,400 --> 00:56:40,520 as any other life-support system. 953 00:56:46,400 --> 00:56:49,120 Over the course of the programme, we have examined the difficulties 954 00:56:49,120 --> 00:56:50,840 of lifting off from Earth 955 00:56:50,840 --> 00:56:54,280 and the perils of travelling through space. 956 00:56:54,280 --> 00:56:57,760 But for the Apollo 11 astronauts, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, 957 00:56:57,760 --> 00:57:01,040 the most challenging part of the mission was yet to come - 958 00:57:01,040 --> 00:57:03,840 exploring a world no-one had ever set foot on. 959 00:57:09,640 --> 00:57:11,400 RADIO: Eagle, everything looks good. 960 00:57:11,400 --> 00:57:14,200 Eagle, Houston, everything's looking good here, over. 961 00:57:15,840 --> 00:57:21,240 At 5:44 on the afternoon of the 20th of July 1969, 962 00:57:21,240 --> 00:57:23,760 the lunar lander, carrying Neil and Buzz, 963 00:57:23,760 --> 00:57:27,400 undocked from the Apollo command module. 964 00:57:27,400 --> 00:57:29,640 Leaving Michael Collins in orbit, 965 00:57:29,640 --> 00:57:32,080 the lander began its journey to the moon's surface. 966 00:57:33,520 --> 00:57:34,560 Roger, copy. 967 00:57:35,960 --> 00:57:38,440 Back in mission control in Houston, 968 00:57:38,440 --> 00:57:43,680 Charlie Duke was helping guide the Apollo 11 team in his role as Capcom. 969 00:57:44,880 --> 00:57:46,320 Go ahead, copy, over. 970 00:57:49,760 --> 00:57:53,600 Capcom is an acronym - capsule communicator - 971 00:57:53,600 --> 00:57:56,480 and it's the only person in mission control 972 00:57:56,480 --> 00:57:59,000 that can actually talk to the crew. 973 00:57:59,000 --> 00:58:02,960 We are go flight. OK, we are go. We are go, same type, we are go. 974 00:58:02,960 --> 00:58:08,440 And it's always an astronaut, because the idea is you are thinking 975 00:58:08,440 --> 00:58:13,560 in this same kind of operational vein that the crew is. 976 00:58:13,560 --> 00:58:15,240 Can you talk to us about that landing? 977 00:58:15,240 --> 00:58:19,000 Because it is safe to say it was more complicated, 978 00:58:19,000 --> 00:58:21,440 the Apollo 11 landing, than it was expected to be. 979 00:58:21,440 --> 00:58:24,680 Correct. There was a lot of problems developed. 980 00:58:24,680 --> 00:58:26,920 And when they started descent, 981 00:58:26,920 --> 00:58:30,160 it seemed like the wheels came off, if you will. 982 00:58:30,160 --> 00:58:33,440 First, we had communication problems, 983 00:58:33,440 --> 00:58:37,320 then all of a sudden, we had computer warnings, 984 00:58:37,320 --> 00:58:39,320 computer overloads. 985 00:58:39,320 --> 00:58:40,560 Programme alarm. 986 00:58:41,600 --> 00:58:45,600 Give us a reading on the 1202 programme alarm. 987 00:58:45,600 --> 00:58:48,040 When I saw that, I said, "We're dead in the water. 988 00:58:48,040 --> 00:58:49,840 "We are not going to make it." 989 00:58:49,840 --> 00:58:52,520 Roger, we got you, we are go on that alarm. 990 00:58:52,520 --> 00:58:55,320 Then we pitched over at 7,000 feet, 991 00:58:55,320 --> 00:58:58,160 and they saw the surface for the first time, 992 00:58:58,160 --> 00:59:05,320 and apparently we had them targeted into a big boulder field, let's call it. 993 00:59:05,320 --> 00:59:10,720 And so Neil had to level off at 400 or 500 feet above the surface, 994 00:59:10,720 --> 00:59:14,880 and skim along the surface for a mile or two. 995 00:59:14,880 --> 00:59:17,280 Holding out. 30 seconds, over. 996 00:59:19,560 --> 00:59:22,120 And so now, we're approaching minimum fuel, 997 00:59:22,120 --> 00:59:24,240 they still weren't on the ground, 998 00:59:24,240 --> 00:59:28,880 and you can imagine the tension was through the roof in mission control. 999 00:59:28,880 --> 00:59:30,560 I'd never heard it as quiet, 1000 00:59:30,560 --> 00:59:33,360 and I felt like we were all holding our breath. 1001 00:59:33,360 --> 00:59:36,200 I heard Buzz say, "Contact engine stop." 1002 00:59:36,200 --> 00:59:38,000 And we knew they were on the ground. 1003 00:59:39,840 --> 00:59:42,280 We copy you down, Eagle. 1004 00:59:42,280 --> 00:59:46,440 It's like punching a balloon, and all the air goes out. 1005 00:59:46,440 --> 00:59:49,400 And that's the way it felt in mission control. 1006 00:59:49,400 --> 00:59:53,200 Houston, Tranquillity Base here, the Eagle has landed. 1007 00:59:53,200 --> 00:59:56,720 Roger, Tw... Tranquillity, we copy you on the ground. 1008 00:59:56,720 --> 00:59:58,560 You've got a bunch of guys about to turn blue, 1009 00:59:58,560 --> 01:00:00,560 we're breathing again. Thanks a lot. 1010 01:00:02,360 --> 01:00:06,080 And I was so excited, I couldn't even say "Tranquillity", 1011 01:00:06,080 --> 01:00:08,760 it came out "Twang". LAUGHTER 1012 01:00:08,760 --> 01:00:13,480 You do all sound very calm, but were you going, 1013 01:00:13,480 --> 01:00:15,000 "What is he doing?"? 1014 01:00:15,000 --> 01:00:17,840 Because this was an unexpected manoeuvre at the very last minute. 1015 01:00:17,840 --> 01:00:24,120 Well, I'm convinced now that had we said, "Eagle abort," 1016 01:00:24,120 --> 01:00:27,160 there would have been dead silence on the other end, 1017 01:00:27,160 --> 01:00:31,080 and it would've later on, "Say again, Houston?" 1018 01:00:31,080 --> 01:00:33,640 He was going to land. 1019 01:00:33,640 --> 01:00:35,120 And I don't blame him. 1020 01:00:35,120 --> 01:00:37,560 No, and you would've all done the same. 1021 01:00:37,560 --> 01:00:38,760 Yeah, yeah. That's it. 1022 01:00:43,440 --> 01:00:46,880 Neil and Buzz spent six hours prepping their spacecraft 1023 01:00:46,880 --> 01:00:48,600 and getting into their spacesuits. 1024 01:00:52,480 --> 01:00:55,840 Then came one of the most famous moments in history. 1025 01:00:58,080 --> 01:01:02,680 Over half a billion people around the world watched and waited 1026 01:01:02,680 --> 01:01:05,360 for Neil to emerge from the lunar lander. 1027 01:01:09,320 --> 01:01:17,320 That's one small step for man... one giant leap for mankind. 1028 01:01:21,160 --> 01:01:27,640 Buzz Aldrin, Michael Collins and Neil Armstrong had made history. 1029 01:01:32,360 --> 01:01:35,440 It was nearly three years later when Charlie Duke 1030 01:01:35,440 --> 01:01:40,120 and Apollo 16 commander John Young followed in Neil and Buzz's footsteps. 1031 01:01:42,760 --> 01:01:44,760 How was your landing on the moon? 1032 01:01:44,760 --> 01:01:48,120 A landing on the moon, in any flight, is dynamic. 1033 01:01:48,120 --> 01:01:51,680 John had to really manoeuvre it, it was a very rough landing area. 1034 01:01:51,680 --> 01:01:55,960 Not boulders-wise, but just undulating terrain. 1035 01:01:55,960 --> 01:02:01,040 And so, about 4-5 feet off the moon, he shut the engine down, 1036 01:02:01,040 --> 01:02:05,920 and boom, we hit the ground, and six hours behind schedule, 1037 01:02:05,920 --> 01:02:09,160 we were on the moon, and I was so excited, 1038 01:02:09,160 --> 01:02:12,560 and I just screamed out, "Oh, Orion is finally here, Houston! 1039 01:02:12,560 --> 01:02:14,080 "Fantastic!" 1040 01:02:14,080 --> 01:02:18,080 And that was probably the first fantastic of 900 fantastics 1041 01:02:18,080 --> 01:02:20,120 during the next three days. 1042 01:02:20,120 --> 01:02:22,160 You loved being up on that moon. 1043 01:02:22,160 --> 01:02:24,000 Oh, yeah, John and I both did. 1044 01:02:24,000 --> 01:02:29,960 We had practised and trained with a camaraderie and a fun personality, 1045 01:02:29,960 --> 01:02:32,720 he had a great sense of humour. 1046 01:02:32,720 --> 01:02:36,360 And so, we just continued that on the moon. 1047 01:02:36,360 --> 01:02:41,040 You begin to come alive with the beauty of the moon, 1048 01:02:41,040 --> 01:02:44,880 and the pristine nature of the moon, never touched. 1049 01:02:44,880 --> 01:02:48,560 The thought kept occurring to me, nobody's ever stepped here before. 1050 01:02:48,560 --> 01:02:50,400 Very, very exciting. 1051 01:02:50,400 --> 01:02:52,040 And you got to drive the rover. 1052 01:02:52,040 --> 01:02:55,880 I got to ride the rover. John was the driver, 1053 01:02:55,880 --> 01:02:57,680 and my job was to navigate. 1054 01:02:57,680 --> 01:03:00,520 Riding on the moon is rough. 1055 01:03:00,520 --> 01:03:02,040 The car bounced a lot. 1056 01:03:02,040 --> 01:03:06,240 And the back end kept, I call fishtail, like this, 1057 01:03:06,240 --> 01:03:07,680 and one time we spun out - 1058 01:03:07,680 --> 01:03:12,000 we went into a little crater, and the car spun around 180 degrees. 1059 01:03:12,000 --> 01:03:15,160 How did you cope in the lower gravity? 1060 01:03:15,160 --> 01:03:17,840 My balance wasn't as good as John's, 1061 01:03:17,840 --> 01:03:21,000 I had to be a little bit more careful. 1062 01:03:21,000 --> 01:03:25,800 I could run right, John could actually jump up, 1063 01:03:25,800 --> 01:03:29,640 do a split, and go down, and pick up a rock. 1064 01:03:29,640 --> 01:03:32,800 And his balance was really good. 1065 01:03:32,800 --> 01:03:35,920 I tried that a couple of times, I never did grab the rock, 1066 01:03:35,920 --> 01:03:39,360 and I fell down a couple of times, so I decided maybe I ought to use 1067 01:03:39,360 --> 01:03:42,600 the shovel to get my rocks up. 1068 01:03:42,600 --> 01:03:45,240 Can the training prepare you for that experience? 1069 01:03:45,240 --> 01:03:47,680 Is it radically different to what you'd expected? 1070 01:03:47,680 --> 01:03:50,720 The training gave you the mechanics of it, 1071 01:03:50,720 --> 01:03:53,960 but not the wonder of it. Not the excitement of it. 1072 01:03:53,960 --> 01:03:56,400 Not the awe of it. 1073 01:03:56,400 --> 01:04:00,080 I mean, you're standing on the moon, and you are looking at the horizon, 1074 01:04:00,080 --> 01:04:02,960 and you look up in this blackness of space, 1075 01:04:02,960 --> 01:04:05,560 you can't do that on Earth. 1076 01:04:05,560 --> 01:04:10,840 And it was incredibly awesome to me. 1077 01:04:10,840 --> 01:04:14,080 One of the most beautiful deserts you can imagine. 1078 01:04:14,080 --> 01:04:17,160 And you kept thinking, "I'm on the moon." Yeah. 1079 01:04:17,160 --> 01:04:20,000 Charlie, thank you very much for coming out. 1080 01:04:20,000 --> 01:04:23,040 Whilst pioneers like Charlie have stood on the moon, 1081 01:04:23,040 --> 01:04:26,280 no human being has set foot on another planet. 1082 01:04:26,280 --> 01:04:28,920 But that's Nasa's long-term aim. 1083 01:04:28,920 --> 01:04:32,560 And it hopes to use the moon as a staging post. 1084 01:04:32,560 --> 01:04:35,640 The moon has one sixth of the gravitational pull of Earth, 1085 01:04:35,640 --> 01:04:39,880 so launching from the moon is estimated to be 20 times cheaper 1086 01:04:39,880 --> 01:04:42,280 than launching from Earth. 1087 01:04:42,280 --> 01:04:45,320 And there are teams investigating now how we can use the moon 1088 01:04:45,320 --> 01:04:47,400 to help us send people to Mars. 1089 01:04:52,120 --> 01:04:55,320 Nearly five miles south of the rocket factories, 1090 01:04:55,320 --> 01:04:57,960 in the corner of Kennedy Space Center, 1091 01:04:57,960 --> 01:05:01,840 is a lab in which they've recreated a piece of the moon's surface. 1092 01:05:03,960 --> 01:05:07,880 I've been invited here to try out the prototype of a fleet of robots 1093 01:05:07,880 --> 01:05:09,840 designed to mine the moon. 1094 01:05:13,800 --> 01:05:17,880 The idea is the autonomous robots would extract fuel and building 1095 01:05:17,880 --> 01:05:22,560 materials, working ahead of any human mission. 1096 01:05:22,560 --> 01:05:25,000 One stick drives one side of the wheels, 1097 01:05:25,000 --> 01:05:27,480 and the other stick drives the other side of the wheels. 1098 01:05:27,480 --> 01:05:29,800 Robotics engineer Ajay Nick 1099 01:05:29,800 --> 01:05:31,960 is letting me take one out for a spin. 1100 01:05:33,160 --> 01:05:35,520 So, we could turn on this button, and you can go ahead 1101 01:05:35,520 --> 01:05:37,760 and raise this arm over here. 1102 01:05:37,760 --> 01:05:40,200 And keep driving. 1103 01:05:40,200 --> 01:05:43,240 You know, there's a real feeling of stability there. 1104 01:05:43,240 --> 01:05:44,480 Ah! 1105 01:05:45,760 --> 01:05:47,920 You're confident I can't break this? 1106 01:05:47,920 --> 01:05:51,120 I have done way worse to this robot. 1107 01:05:51,120 --> 01:05:53,800 I suppose the obvious question is, if you want to mine this, 1108 01:05:53,800 --> 01:05:56,040 why don't you just get a shovel and dig it up? 1109 01:05:56,040 --> 01:05:58,720 Why is the robot so complicated? 1110 01:05:58,720 --> 01:06:00,960 The first problem is we're trying to make everything 1111 01:06:00,960 --> 01:06:03,760 as lightweight as possible, fit inside of a rocket. 1112 01:06:03,760 --> 01:06:05,720 Then you get there on the lunar surface, 1113 01:06:05,720 --> 01:06:08,440 and you have reduced gravity once you get there, 1114 01:06:08,440 --> 01:06:10,680 so now the thing that was already really light, 1115 01:06:10,680 --> 01:06:12,920 because you had to make it light to fit in the rocket, 1116 01:06:12,920 --> 01:06:15,120 is even lighter while it's there on Earth. 1117 01:06:15,120 --> 01:06:18,000 This is really some rock. Really shocked. 1118 01:06:18,000 --> 01:06:20,440 With one sixth of Earth's gravity, 1119 01:06:20,440 --> 01:06:23,280 operating on the moon creates a challenge. 1120 01:06:23,280 --> 01:06:26,080 OK, Houston, I'm digging exploratory trench right here. 1121 01:06:26,080 --> 01:06:28,240 OK, we copy that. 1122 01:06:28,240 --> 01:06:31,200 While the Apollo astronauts could move around with ease, 1123 01:06:31,200 --> 01:06:35,560 they found simple tasks like digging and collecting rocks difficult. 1124 01:06:39,920 --> 01:06:43,360 Current Earth terrestrial excavators actually get their excavation 1125 01:06:43,360 --> 01:06:45,560 force, their ability to cut through the soil, 1126 01:06:45,560 --> 01:06:47,440 from their weight of their vehicle. 1127 01:06:47,440 --> 01:06:51,520 Here, since we don't have a lot of weight, it's very difficult. 1128 01:06:51,520 --> 01:06:54,560 Ajay and his team have come up with a unique design 1129 01:06:54,560 --> 01:06:58,000 that will allow their robots to work in the moon's weak gravity. 1130 01:07:00,600 --> 01:07:02,480 So now, I'm digging. 1131 01:07:02,480 --> 01:07:07,160 The scooping drums at either end rotate in opposite directions. 1132 01:07:07,160 --> 01:07:10,200 This has the effect of pinning the robot to the ground, 1133 01:07:10,200 --> 01:07:14,400 allowing it to dig without floating off into space. 1134 01:07:14,400 --> 01:07:18,240 As one drum on the front is digging, the other drum is rotating 1135 01:07:18,240 --> 01:07:20,360 the opposite direction from the other drum, 1136 01:07:20,360 --> 01:07:23,200 and so, that allows the excavation forces to be cancelled, 1137 01:07:23,200 --> 01:07:24,360 as it's digging. 1138 01:07:26,000 --> 01:07:29,680 This is the only vehicle in the world that can dig 1139 01:07:29,680 --> 01:07:32,000 more than its own weight. 1140 01:07:32,000 --> 01:07:34,400 If I took it into this trench the wrong way... 1141 01:07:34,400 --> 01:07:36,400 Right. ..it may well fall over. 1142 01:07:36,400 --> 01:07:39,160 Mm-hm. Can I do that? Yeah. Oh, yep. 1143 01:07:41,000 --> 01:07:43,280 Unlike other planetary rovers, 1144 01:07:43,280 --> 01:07:46,760 these robots are meant to be robust, 1145 01:07:46,760 --> 01:07:49,560 designed to get themselves out of problems, 1146 01:07:49,560 --> 01:07:52,840 even if they're flipped upside down. 1147 01:07:52,840 --> 01:07:55,280 It's really easy to drive, and really manoeuvrable, 1148 01:07:55,280 --> 01:07:56,640 and really powerful. 1149 01:07:56,640 --> 01:07:59,520 And it does seem like you can get out of a lot of trouble. 1150 01:07:59,520 --> 01:08:02,920 Once the lunar dirt has been dug up, 1151 01:08:02,920 --> 01:08:06,720 it needs to be transformed into a building material. 1152 01:08:06,720 --> 01:08:08,680 Show you some materials here. 1153 01:08:08,680 --> 01:08:13,200 Senior technologist Robert Muller has been sintering the lunar dust, 1154 01:08:13,200 --> 01:08:16,160 heating it until it solidifies. 1155 01:08:16,160 --> 01:08:20,680 So, the result, a well-centred regolith, is this, 1156 01:08:20,680 --> 01:08:24,320 and that's essentially turning crushed rock back into solid rock. 1157 01:08:24,320 --> 01:08:26,800 That's really quite heavy, actually. That feels quite dense. 1158 01:08:26,800 --> 01:08:28,840 So that is just this material in an oven, essentially. 1159 01:08:28,840 --> 01:08:30,440 That's right. 1160 01:08:30,440 --> 01:08:34,240 By mixing the regolith with plastic, Rob can create something 1161 01:08:34,240 --> 01:08:36,320 far more versatile - 1162 01:08:36,320 --> 01:08:39,040 a material which can be used in a 3D printer. 1163 01:08:40,400 --> 01:08:42,880 And we use the big robot arm, we have a print head on it, 1164 01:08:42,880 --> 01:08:45,040 and then we're able to make objects like this, 1165 01:08:45,040 --> 01:08:46,920 this is a blast deflection wall. 1166 01:08:46,920 --> 01:08:50,960 Or this is an ogive dome, it could be used for the roof 1167 01:08:50,960 --> 01:08:54,280 of a habitat when it gets really big, and in fact it's quite strong. 1168 01:08:54,280 --> 01:08:57,000 If you look down at it, it's very strong. 1169 01:08:57,000 --> 01:08:59,080 You could kick it all day long, and it won't break. 1170 01:08:59,080 --> 01:09:02,600 That's quite remarkable. So that is built by that robot? Yes. 1171 01:09:02,600 --> 01:09:05,760 Using essentially the regolith that you would find on the moon? 1172 01:09:05,760 --> 01:09:08,800 That's correct. So, you never bring any materials from Earth. 1173 01:09:08,800 --> 01:09:11,840 You go mine them on the moon, and then you build whatever 1174 01:09:11,840 --> 01:09:16,840 you need to create your local moon base out of local materials. 1175 01:09:16,840 --> 01:09:18,280 All you have to bring is the robot. 1176 01:09:18,280 --> 01:09:20,000 Everything is there, is the point. 1177 01:09:20,000 --> 01:09:21,400 Everything is there. 1178 01:09:21,400 --> 01:09:26,480 The only two things missing are technologies and imagination. 1179 01:09:26,480 --> 01:09:28,480 If we can put those two things together, 1180 01:09:28,480 --> 01:09:31,800 and harness the materials and the energy we have in space, 1181 01:09:31,800 --> 01:09:34,200 we have all the resources in space we need. 1182 01:09:34,200 --> 01:09:36,960 We just need to be clever enough to learn how to use them. 1183 01:09:39,880 --> 01:09:42,920 Mars is an ambitious goal. 1184 01:09:42,920 --> 01:09:47,280 And one of the greatest challenges is the enormous amount of fuel 1185 01:09:47,280 --> 01:09:49,640 needed to propel a spacecraft to the red planet. 1186 01:09:54,320 --> 01:09:56,880 But this fuel could be created on the moon. 1187 01:10:00,960 --> 01:10:03,280 Now, you might think that synthesising rocket fuel 1188 01:10:03,280 --> 01:10:06,720 from material you can find on the moon or Mars is difficult, 1189 01:10:06,720 --> 01:10:08,320 but actually, it isn't. 1190 01:10:08,320 --> 01:10:11,600 It's very easy indeed, because all you need is water. 1191 01:10:11,600 --> 01:10:15,040 And water is made out of hydrogen and oxygen. 1192 01:10:15,040 --> 01:10:19,160 And they are also the first and third most abundant elements 1193 01:10:19,160 --> 01:10:20,720 in the entire universe. 1194 01:10:20,720 --> 01:10:23,320 So, water is all over the place. 1195 01:10:23,320 --> 01:10:27,480 We found it in the rocks of the moon's crust. 1196 01:10:27,480 --> 01:10:31,080 And all you have to do to split the water into hydrogen and oxygen 1197 01:10:31,080 --> 01:10:35,240 is put some energy in, which I can do by connecting 1198 01:10:35,240 --> 01:10:37,920 a battery to these two electrodes. 1199 01:10:37,920 --> 01:10:41,240 And I think you can see there, already, you see those bubbles 1200 01:10:41,240 --> 01:10:45,720 starting to form? Well, on this one, where the electrons are going in, 1201 01:10:45,720 --> 01:10:48,760 those bubbles are hydrogen. That's hydrogen gas. 1202 01:10:48,760 --> 01:10:52,200 And on this one, where the electrons are coming back out again, the anode, 1203 01:10:52,200 --> 01:10:54,520 those are bubbles of oxygen. 1204 01:10:54,520 --> 01:10:56,880 So, we've put energy in to split the water, 1205 01:10:56,880 --> 01:10:59,720 to make the hydrogen and oxygen, then if you put these into big 1206 01:10:59,720 --> 01:11:03,840 tanks, and bring them back together, and light them, you get that energy 1207 01:11:03,840 --> 01:11:06,760 back out again. And that is a rocket. 1208 01:11:18,400 --> 01:11:20,360 So, how likely is that to work? 1209 01:11:20,360 --> 01:11:22,800 Well, I think it's certainly going to work, it sounds 1210 01:11:22,800 --> 01:11:25,240 like science fiction, but I think for the first time, 1211 01:11:25,240 --> 01:11:28,400 we have the technology to begin to be able to make that happen. 1212 01:11:28,400 --> 01:11:30,800 OK, any idea how long before we can do that? 1213 01:11:30,800 --> 01:11:32,320 See, I dodged that. 1214 01:11:32,320 --> 01:11:34,440 But I would say that we have the technology now, 1215 01:11:34,440 --> 01:11:36,880 we have the reusable rockets, we have the robots that can do it. 1216 01:11:36,880 --> 01:11:38,120 We now need the will. 1217 01:11:38,120 --> 01:11:40,200 But if we want to start mining asteroids, or the moon, 1218 01:11:40,200 --> 01:11:42,600 tomorrow, then we have the technology to do it. 1219 01:11:42,600 --> 01:11:45,440 So it could be now. In reality, what, 1220 01:11:45,440 --> 01:11:47,200 20 years? If we're lucky. 1221 01:11:47,200 --> 01:11:48,920 That's still within our lifetime. 1222 01:11:50,840 --> 01:11:56,120 Nasa's next deep space mission is planned for summer 2020. 1223 01:11:56,120 --> 01:12:00,120 They're going to send a new rover to Mars to search for evidence 1224 01:12:00,120 --> 01:12:03,960 of life, and to help them get rock samples back to Earth. 1225 01:12:07,440 --> 01:12:09,920 Hannah went to California to find out more. 1226 01:12:12,480 --> 01:12:17,520 Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory has sent out over 100 robotic 1227 01:12:17,520 --> 01:12:20,480 spacecraft across our solar system. 1228 01:12:22,480 --> 01:12:28,080 Voyagers 1 and 2 have flown past Jupiter and Neptune, 1229 01:12:28,080 --> 01:12:31,320 and are currently travelling through interstellar space. 1230 01:12:33,760 --> 01:12:39,760 And the famous Cassini mission imaged Saturn and its moons. 1231 01:12:41,840 --> 01:12:44,680 Now, Nasa's readying its next one, 1232 01:12:44,680 --> 01:12:47,800 which will land on our nearest neighbour. 1233 01:12:47,800 --> 01:12:51,880 This is the Mars 2020 Rover. 1234 01:12:51,880 --> 01:12:56,320 The rover's primary mission is to explore the Martian surface, 1235 01:12:56,320 --> 01:12:58,320 and this is the chassis that they're going to use 1236 01:12:58,320 --> 01:13:01,000 to test out all the various pieces of equipment. 1237 01:13:01,000 --> 01:13:05,240 It's all been planned with a future human mission in mind, 1238 01:13:05,240 --> 01:13:07,920 which means that all the information that this is going to send back 1239 01:13:07,920 --> 01:13:12,520 will be absolutely crucial to getting people onto the red planet. 1240 01:13:12,520 --> 01:13:15,800 And more importantly, back home again safely. 1241 01:13:17,800 --> 01:13:22,160 While this rover will be a first step to understanding how to get 1242 01:13:22,160 --> 01:13:28,000 back from Mars, its key mission is to study the geology and climate 1243 01:13:28,000 --> 01:13:29,640 of the red planet 1244 01:13:29,640 --> 01:13:32,360 and determine whether life existed there. 1245 01:13:35,640 --> 01:13:39,000 In JPL's clean room, construction of the rover 1246 01:13:39,000 --> 01:13:41,400 is reaching a critical stage. 1247 01:13:43,880 --> 01:13:47,480 And leading the flight systems team is Dave Gruel. 1248 01:13:49,160 --> 01:13:51,200 When is this thing going to be ready, then? 1249 01:13:51,200 --> 01:13:55,640 Launch date is in July of 2020, and then we are scheduled to land 1250 01:13:55,640 --> 01:13:57,760 on the surface of Mars in 2021. 1251 01:14:00,280 --> 01:14:03,440 The rover's landing site is Jezero crater. 1252 01:14:05,080 --> 01:14:09,480 If you look at it from the orbiters, it looks like a big river 1253 01:14:09,480 --> 01:14:11,480 might have flown into this area. 1254 01:14:11,480 --> 01:14:13,560 And when you have rivers, the hope is that by looking 1255 01:14:13,560 --> 01:14:15,720 at an area like this, they will get a vast array 1256 01:14:15,720 --> 01:14:18,760 of different types of rock samples and sand samples and things 1257 01:14:18,760 --> 01:14:22,280 like that that will allow them to peer through time and understand 1258 01:14:22,280 --> 01:14:24,600 how Mars might have formed, and how it came to be 1259 01:14:24,600 --> 01:14:25,680 what it is today. 1260 01:14:27,000 --> 01:14:31,280 Evidence of water would offer the tantalising possibility 1261 01:14:31,280 --> 01:14:34,320 that life may once have existed at Jezero. 1262 01:14:35,560 --> 01:14:39,680 And one of this rover's key tasks will be to look for it. 1263 01:14:41,240 --> 01:14:45,200 To achieve this, it will be loaded with tools, 1264 01:14:45,200 --> 01:14:50,240 and sitting at the end of a 2.1-metre arm will be the drill, 1265 01:14:50,240 --> 01:14:56,240 which will cut 30mm-diameter cores of Martian bedrock. 1266 01:14:56,240 --> 01:15:00,000 These will help provide a far more detailed picture 1267 01:15:00,000 --> 01:15:02,040 of the red planet's geology. 1268 01:15:03,160 --> 01:15:07,560 The rover can analyse the core samples collected by this drill 1269 01:15:07,560 --> 01:15:11,240 as it goes, but what the scientists really want to do is to get 1270 01:15:11,240 --> 01:15:15,080 those samples back to Earth, because we can do so much 1271 01:15:15,080 --> 01:15:18,840 more analysis on them here than the rover can on Mars. 1272 01:15:24,480 --> 01:15:29,680 This is the first mission that's part of an attempt to send material 1273 01:15:29,680 --> 01:15:32,600 from the red planet back to Earth. 1274 01:15:34,480 --> 01:15:38,040 This is one of the rover's sample collection tubes. 1275 01:15:38,040 --> 01:15:41,040 Whenever it drills a sample of rock, it will store it in one of these, 1276 01:15:41,040 --> 01:15:42,480 and seal it. 1277 01:15:42,480 --> 01:15:44,960 Then it labels it, sends a message back to Earth 1278 01:15:44,960 --> 01:15:49,200 about where it is, and leaves it on the ground. 1279 01:15:49,200 --> 01:15:52,040 And as the rover trundles off into the distance, 1280 01:15:52,040 --> 01:15:56,760 the tube waits patiently for another mission to come and collect it. 1281 01:15:58,520 --> 01:16:03,000 The next stage of the plan is truly audacious. 1282 01:16:03,000 --> 01:16:07,880 A second rover will land near the samples and collect them. 1283 01:16:07,880 --> 01:16:10,720 It'll then take them to a launcher, which will fire them 1284 01:16:10,720 --> 01:16:13,560 into orbit around Mars. 1285 01:16:13,560 --> 01:16:18,640 Then a third mission will rendezvous with them in orbit, 1286 01:16:18,640 --> 01:16:21,200 and bring them back to Earth. 1287 01:16:21,200 --> 01:16:24,520 And while those second and third missions are still on the drawing 1288 01:16:24,520 --> 01:16:29,240 board, if they succeed, it'll put us a giant step closer 1289 01:16:29,240 --> 01:16:33,040 to bringing astronauts back from the red planet safely. 1290 01:16:34,880 --> 01:16:38,320 It's become a bit of a cliche that a manned mission to Mars is only 1291 01:16:38,320 --> 01:16:41,800 20 or 30 years away. We've basically been saying the same thing 1292 01:16:41,800 --> 01:16:43,840 since the 1960s. 1293 01:16:43,840 --> 01:16:47,760 But projects like this one really do make that idea of having astronauts 1294 01:16:47,760 --> 01:16:50,920 on the red planet much more feasible. 1295 01:16:50,920 --> 01:16:53,360 So maybe this time, that timescale has a ring 1296 01:16:53,360 --> 01:16:55,040 of truth to it. 1297 01:17:07,400 --> 01:17:10,640 See? Finally, finally we get the weather that Florida promised, 1298 01:17:10,640 --> 01:17:13,080 and I'm now overdressed. So am I. 1299 01:17:13,080 --> 01:17:14,720 I know, it's ridiculous, actually. 1300 01:17:14,720 --> 01:17:17,400 Why is this planet so difficult to predict? 1301 01:17:17,400 --> 01:17:20,120 Sending spaceships to other planets has taught us so much 1302 01:17:20,120 --> 01:17:21,760 about the solar system. 1303 01:17:21,760 --> 01:17:24,440 So far, we've talked about exploring the moon 1304 01:17:24,440 --> 01:17:27,880 and Mars, but there's another alien world on our radar 1305 01:17:27,880 --> 01:17:29,640 for a future mission. 1306 01:17:29,640 --> 01:17:34,720 One of Saturn's moons, Titan, which is shrouded in dense methane 1307 01:17:34,720 --> 01:17:38,120 clouds, could be in line to receive its second visit 1308 01:17:38,120 --> 01:17:40,440 from a lander. 1309 01:17:40,440 --> 01:17:42,560 I'm delighted to say we're joined by a scientist 1310 01:17:42,560 --> 01:17:44,960 who's been involved in a series of missions at the forefront 1311 01:17:44,960 --> 01:17:47,520 of our discovery of how our solar systems work, 1312 01:17:47,520 --> 01:17:49,640 planetary scientist at Johns Hopkins University 1313 01:17:49,640 --> 01:17:51,040 Doctor Zibi Turtle. 1314 01:17:51,040 --> 01:17:53,080 Thank you for joining us. Hi, my pleasure. 1315 01:17:53,080 --> 01:17:55,960 What is so interesting about Titan? 1316 01:17:55,960 --> 01:18:00,320 Titan has very rich organic chemistry. 1317 01:18:00,320 --> 01:18:03,920 There's energy in the form of sunlight, and there's, 1318 01:18:03,920 --> 01:18:07,120 in the past, been liquid water available at the surface 1319 01:18:07,120 --> 01:18:10,960 that the organic material can mix with, and there's also a liquid 1320 01:18:10,960 --> 01:18:13,640 water ocean deep in its interior. 1321 01:18:13,640 --> 01:18:16,960 It's the only place that comes close, in terms of organic 1322 01:18:16,960 --> 01:18:19,280 complexity, to our Earth. 1323 01:18:19,280 --> 01:18:23,120 And in that sense, it's very much like the early Earth, 1324 01:18:23,120 --> 01:18:26,520 and we want to understand what happens chemically, 1325 01:18:26,520 --> 01:18:28,640 how that chemistry progresses, 1326 01:18:28,640 --> 01:18:30,880 because we can't study that on Earth, because it's 1327 01:18:30,880 --> 01:18:33,320 over-printed by biology very effectively. 1328 01:18:33,320 --> 01:18:35,760 It's almost like a time machine, I suppose, isn't it? 1329 01:18:35,760 --> 01:18:37,360 In a sense we can go back... Yes, exactly! 1330 01:18:37,360 --> 01:18:40,000 ..to the early Earth, see what the chemistry's like. 1331 01:18:40,000 --> 01:18:41,400 Exactly. Yeah. 1332 01:18:41,400 --> 01:18:42,960 Yeah, that's a good way of putting it. 1333 01:18:42,960 --> 01:18:46,800 Titan's been doing these prebiotic chemistry experiments for hundreds 1334 01:18:46,800 --> 01:18:49,400 of millions of years, and we want to go collect 1335 01:18:49,400 --> 01:18:52,800 the results of those experiments, and understand what happens 1336 01:18:52,800 --> 01:18:57,080 with the chemistry that eventually led to biology here on Earth. 1337 01:18:57,080 --> 01:19:02,160 I mean, the next plan to land on Titan is an incredibly exciting one, 1338 01:19:02,160 --> 01:19:05,320 because you're going to use the atmosphere to travel in a way 1339 01:19:05,320 --> 01:19:09,040 that we haven't any time we've landed anywhere else. 1340 01:19:09,040 --> 01:19:12,600 Right. So we're in the process of proposing a mission, 1341 01:19:12,600 --> 01:19:14,600 that mission is called Dragonfly. 1342 01:19:14,600 --> 01:19:18,000 So Dragonfly would be a rotorcraft, and it would be able 1343 01:19:18,000 --> 01:19:21,840 to use Titan's atmosphere to be able to fly from place to place. 1344 01:19:21,840 --> 01:19:25,320 Titan's atmosphere, surface pressure, is about one and a half 1345 01:19:25,320 --> 01:19:29,360 times the pressure here on Earth, but the gravity is about one seventh 1346 01:19:29,360 --> 01:19:31,040 the gravity here on Earth. 1347 01:19:31,040 --> 01:19:34,480 So it's actually easier to fly on Titan than it is on Earth, 1348 01:19:34,480 --> 01:19:37,120 and if we could go to Titan, right, 1349 01:19:37,120 --> 01:19:40,080 and we had really good, warm, woolly sweaters and some oxygen, 1350 01:19:40,080 --> 01:19:42,800 we'd be able to fly if we had wings. 1351 01:19:42,800 --> 01:19:46,040 Yeah. So it's really, you know, it's really an evocative 1352 01:19:46,040 --> 01:19:47,360 place to explore. 1353 01:19:47,360 --> 01:19:49,440 Are you prepared, by the way, to the level to which people 1354 01:19:49,440 --> 01:19:52,080 are going to fall in love with a hopping, flying drone 1355 01:19:52,080 --> 01:19:54,360 on a distant planet? We do tend to anthropomorphise... 1356 01:19:54,360 --> 01:19:56,800 Oh, absolutely, absolutely! 1357 01:19:56,800 --> 01:20:01,880 And I am... I have fallen completely in love with this idea myself. 1358 01:20:01,880 --> 01:20:04,680 It has been one of the features of the decade that we've been doing 1359 01:20:04,680 --> 01:20:07,600 Stargazing, that we've seen the results come in from things 1360 01:20:07,600 --> 01:20:11,000 like Cassini and Galileo and New Horizon, and it just seems 1361 01:20:11,000 --> 01:20:13,440 to be that the universe creates planets and moons 1362 01:20:13,440 --> 01:20:17,120 in a far more varied way than we ever thought. 1363 01:20:17,120 --> 01:20:18,440 Yeah, I think you're right. 1364 01:20:18,440 --> 01:20:22,520 The Curiosity rover as well on Mars, I think what we're finding 1365 01:20:22,520 --> 01:20:25,040 is that the potential for life beyond Earth, 1366 01:20:25,040 --> 01:20:28,400 we don't know, it could be that there is no life for a long way, 1367 01:20:28,400 --> 01:20:30,080 thousands of light years beyond Earth, 1368 01:20:30,080 --> 01:20:32,560 or, it could be we will answer the question, 1369 01:20:32,560 --> 01:20:36,000 "are we alone" in the negative, no, we are not alone, 1370 01:20:36,000 --> 01:20:39,040 in our solar system, which I think is the thing that most 1371 01:20:39,040 --> 01:20:43,120 excites me about these next missions for the next 10 or 20 years. 1372 01:20:43,120 --> 01:20:45,520 When the first people land on Mars, they won't have anything 1373 01:20:45,520 --> 01:20:48,400 as exciting as Dragonfly to travel around on, 1374 01:20:48,400 --> 01:20:51,920 but already now, Nasa are devising new vehicles to help them 1375 01:20:51,920 --> 01:20:53,480 traverse that planet. 1376 01:20:53,480 --> 01:20:56,880 In Houston, Hannah got to go on this new expanded form 1377 01:20:56,880 --> 01:20:59,920 of the moon buggy, and give it a test ride. 1378 01:21:03,440 --> 01:21:06,640 At over £7 million each, 1379 01:21:06,640 --> 01:21:08,600 the lunar rovers are the most 1380 01:21:08,600 --> 01:21:11,280 expensive cars ever built. 1381 01:21:12,560 --> 01:21:17,880 But the 56 miles that astronauts covered during Apollo 15, 16 and 1382 01:21:17,880 --> 01:21:23,200 17 allowed them to study a huge variety of lunar landscapes, 1383 01:21:23,200 --> 01:21:26,960 so they might have been the most important miles ever driven. 1384 01:21:26,960 --> 01:21:31,720 And now, half a century later, Nasa have built a new vehicle. 1385 01:21:35,240 --> 01:21:39,160 This is the Space Exploration Vehicle. 1386 01:21:39,160 --> 01:21:43,360 It's designed to help astronauts explore the red planet. 1387 01:21:43,360 --> 01:21:48,320 And today, Nasa is letting me get behind the wheel with some 1388 01:21:48,320 --> 01:21:51,120 very well-qualified supervision. 1389 01:21:51,120 --> 01:21:52,640 Hi, Hannah, welcome aboard. 1390 01:21:52,640 --> 01:21:54,040 Thank you. 1391 01:21:54,040 --> 01:21:57,840 Astronaut Doug Wheelock has flown in space twice, 1392 01:21:57,840 --> 01:22:00,680 logging nearly six months in orbit. 1393 01:22:00,680 --> 01:22:03,280 Dual controls. Dual controls. 1394 01:22:03,280 --> 01:22:07,000 Here is a hand controller, so you're now the pilot. 1395 01:22:07,000 --> 01:22:10,360 And today, he's chaperoning my test drive 1396 01:22:10,360 --> 01:22:14,120 of this multimillion-dollar space vehicle. 1397 01:22:14,120 --> 01:22:17,160 Now just twist it to the right, and keep the control in. 1398 01:22:17,160 --> 01:22:18,360 Whoops. It's OK. 1399 01:22:18,360 --> 01:22:20,800 When you initially twist it, all the wheels are going to line up... 1400 01:22:20,800 --> 01:22:22,960 Oh, I see. That's why we jump. ..before it starts moving. 1401 01:22:22,960 --> 01:22:24,040 So... OK. 1402 01:22:26,520 --> 01:22:28,840 Perfect. Ooh. Perfect. 1403 01:22:30,520 --> 01:22:35,440 Johnson Space Center's rock yard mimics the rugged terrain astronauts 1404 01:22:35,440 --> 01:22:38,880 might experience on the red planet. 1405 01:22:38,880 --> 01:22:41,560 These, some of these are quite big, it's a bit disconcerting 1406 01:22:41,560 --> 01:22:44,760 to watch them go under your feet. Absolutely, yes. Mm-hm. 1407 01:22:44,760 --> 01:22:47,280 The vehicle's joystick controls six 1408 01:22:47,280 --> 01:22:49,840 entirely independent pairs of wheels 1409 01:22:49,840 --> 01:22:54,600 that can rotate 360 degrees in either direction. 1410 01:22:55,960 --> 01:23:00,560 A bank of screens keeps astronauts up to speed on key information, 1411 01:23:00,560 --> 01:23:03,680 what each set of wheels is doing, and whether the cabin 1412 01:23:03,680 --> 01:23:06,320 is at a dangerous angle. 1413 01:23:06,320 --> 01:23:09,640 And that gives astronauts confidence to perform some 1414 01:23:09,640 --> 01:23:12,440 pretty impressive manoeuvres. 1415 01:23:12,440 --> 01:23:14,440 Straight left, and come up out of the crater. 1416 01:23:14,440 --> 01:23:16,440 Mm-hm. Twist and up. 1417 01:23:16,440 --> 01:23:18,720 Or you can just go straight left. 1418 01:23:18,720 --> 01:23:20,200 Crab out of a crater! 1419 01:23:27,440 --> 01:23:30,560 So you can see the vehicle's... it's got a very, very low centre 1420 01:23:30,560 --> 01:23:33,520 of gravity, so it has no problems at all. 1421 01:23:33,520 --> 01:23:35,480 Unlike me. 1422 01:23:35,480 --> 01:23:37,600 You're doing great, though. 1423 01:23:38,880 --> 01:23:42,200 So is this a big step up from anything that went before? 1424 01:23:42,200 --> 01:23:45,520 The biggest difference between this vehicle and the lunar 1425 01:23:45,520 --> 01:23:48,080 rovers that we took during the Apollo era 1426 01:23:48,080 --> 01:23:50,600 is this is a spaceship in and of itself, 1427 01:23:50,600 --> 01:23:53,440 and so all of our life systems are on board. 1428 01:23:53,440 --> 01:23:55,000 All of our supplies. 1429 01:23:55,000 --> 01:23:58,080 And so we can leave our base camp, if you will, 1430 01:23:58,080 --> 01:24:02,160 in a vehicle like this, and go out on a week-long mission, 1431 01:24:02,160 --> 01:24:03,560 a two-week mission. 1432 01:24:05,040 --> 01:24:08,480 On the moon, astronaut survival depended entirely 1433 01:24:08,480 --> 01:24:10,120 on their spacesuits. 1434 01:24:10,120 --> 01:24:14,800 So the lunar rover could only take them as far as they could walk back 1435 01:24:14,800 --> 01:24:17,000 in case of a breakdown. 1436 01:24:17,000 --> 01:24:20,240 It meant that the furthest an Apollo astronaut ever strayed 1437 01:24:20,240 --> 01:24:24,120 from the lunar lander was just 4.6 miles. 1438 01:24:26,160 --> 01:24:29,440 The Space Exploration Vehicle is effectively 1439 01:24:29,440 --> 01:24:31,400 a spacecraft on wheels, 1440 01:24:31,400 --> 01:24:34,640 so it can take astronauts much further. 1441 01:24:34,640 --> 01:24:38,040 Right now, our range is about 125 miles, 1442 01:24:38,040 --> 01:24:42,560 and we expect that to be expanded over the next several years, 1443 01:24:42,560 --> 01:24:45,480 as we...as we take a look at new technologies. 1444 01:24:45,480 --> 01:24:47,880 And that's just in a straight line. I mean, that means the area 1445 01:24:47,880 --> 01:24:50,320 that you can sweep out, effectively, is going to be enormous. 1446 01:24:50,320 --> 01:24:52,360 Absolutely, absolutely, yeah. 1447 01:24:53,600 --> 01:24:58,240 With the buggy's hydrogen fuel cells also providing drinking water, 1448 01:24:58,240 --> 01:25:02,080 the scope for exploration is vast. 1449 01:25:02,080 --> 01:25:06,360 The huge windows will allow astronauts to study the Martian 1450 01:25:06,360 --> 01:25:07,920 landscape in detail. 1451 01:25:09,600 --> 01:25:11,080 Steady. 1452 01:25:11,080 --> 01:25:13,200 Looking good. 1453 01:25:13,200 --> 01:25:16,840 But you can't fully explore from inside. 1454 01:25:16,840 --> 01:25:21,200 To collect rocks and soil samples, astronauts will need to leave 1455 01:25:21,200 --> 01:25:22,200 the vehicle. 1456 01:25:23,840 --> 01:25:27,120 Getting out of a pressurised spacecraft is quite a tricky thing 1457 01:25:27,120 --> 01:25:30,360 to do, so on the ISS, the astronauts had to squeeze 1458 01:25:30,360 --> 01:25:34,200 through this tiny airlock, and on this Space Exploration 1459 01:25:34,200 --> 01:25:36,720 Vehicle, that's just not something that's going to be practical. 1460 01:25:36,720 --> 01:25:40,880 So instead, the engineers came up with a very clever design. 1461 01:25:40,880 --> 01:25:44,520 The spacesuit itself is the airlock. 1462 01:25:45,800 --> 01:25:49,320 Combining the spacesuit and the airlock means that astronauts 1463 01:25:49,320 --> 01:25:52,880 can leave the vehicle in around 15 minutes, 1464 01:25:52,880 --> 01:25:55,880 and because the suit never enters the cabin, 1465 01:25:55,880 --> 01:26:01,600 the living space is protected from contamination by Martian dust. 1466 01:26:01,600 --> 01:26:05,280 For now, this Space Exploration Vehicle is just a prototype. 1467 01:26:05,280 --> 01:26:08,720 The next generation is going to need to be faster, 1468 01:26:08,720 --> 01:26:12,200 have better batteries, and be an awful lot lighter. 1469 01:26:12,200 --> 01:26:16,440 But one thing is for sure, whatever it ends up looking like, 1470 01:26:16,440 --> 01:26:22,080 a fully functional Mars buggy is an essential part of Nasa's plan 1471 01:26:22,080 --> 01:26:24,560 to send people to the red planet. 1472 01:26:33,800 --> 01:26:36,760 Charlie, you have lived through the most remarkable time 1473 01:26:36,760 --> 01:26:38,360 in the history of exploration. 1474 01:26:38,360 --> 01:26:40,800 Are you optimistic about the future? 1475 01:26:40,800 --> 01:26:43,000 Yes, generally. 1476 01:26:43,000 --> 01:26:46,840 I'm very excited about the commercialisation of private 1477 01:26:46,840 --> 01:26:48,760 enterprise in space, 1478 01:26:48,760 --> 01:26:53,400 to go to the space station, or to take tourists into space, 1479 01:26:53,400 --> 01:26:57,880 and Nasa, I feel, is going to focus more on what I call deep space, 1480 01:26:57,880 --> 01:26:59,520 the moon and beyond. 1481 01:26:59,520 --> 01:27:03,280 So hopefully, we can build a moon base, and develop systems 1482 01:27:03,280 --> 01:27:07,760 and stuff on the moon for scientific purposes, 1483 01:27:07,760 --> 01:27:11,280 and then from there, not stage directly to Mars, 1484 01:27:11,280 --> 01:27:15,400 but give the confidence in our systems that, when we go 1485 01:27:15,400 --> 01:27:18,200 to Mars, you're on your own, and you're going to be able 1486 01:27:18,200 --> 01:27:20,120 to survive. 1487 01:27:20,120 --> 01:27:22,480 Charlie, thank you very much. 1488 01:27:22,480 --> 01:27:26,080 It's been a tremendous honour to get a kind of backstage peek 1489 01:27:26,080 --> 01:27:30,000 here at Kennedy's spaceport, at this new exciting era of space 1490 01:27:30,000 --> 01:27:31,800 travel that we're just on the cusp of 1491 01:27:31,800 --> 01:27:36,080 but also to get a sense of how much that this new era owes to the heroes 1492 01:27:36,080 --> 01:27:38,720 of Apollo, not just the astronauts like Charlie Duke, 1493 01:27:38,720 --> 01:27:41,040 but the thousands of people who worked tirelessly, 1494 01:27:41,040 --> 01:27:45,240 brilliantly, inventively, to get them to the moon and back. 1495 01:27:45,240 --> 01:27:47,040 But sadly, that's all we have time for. 1496 01:27:47,040 --> 01:27:50,080 It is, and you know, Stargazing is about observing the sky, so if it's 1497 01:27:50,080 --> 01:27:51,920 clear where you are, why don't you go 1498 01:27:51,920 --> 01:27:54,960 up and have a look at that moon, and let your mind wander a bit, 1499 01:27:54,960 --> 01:27:58,600 because that is a place where humans, like Charlie, have walked. 1500 01:27:58,600 --> 01:28:01,000 And I think if there's one thing that we've learned in our time 1501 01:28:01,000 --> 01:28:04,360 at Kennedy, it's that if we choose, then that can be a place 1502 01:28:04,360 --> 01:28:06,240 where humans walk again. 1503 01:28:06,240 --> 01:28:07,760 Goodnight. Goodnight.