On the 50th anniversary of the moon landing, the Google Doodle honors the Apollo 11 mission with an animated video of the journey
- The July 20, 2019 Google Doodle commemorates the 50th anniversary of the moon landing with an illustration and an animated video chronicling the journey from Earth to the moon and back.
- The video is accompanied by a voiceover narration from the Apollo 11 command module pilot Michael Collins, who joined seven other surviving astronauts in March to celebrate the history-making mission.
- Visit INSIDER's homepage for more stories.
The July 20, 2019 Google Doodle replaces the two letter 'O's with an astronaut's spherical helmet and the Earth, in a celebratory image depicting the 50th anniversary of the moon landing.
Once clicked upon, a pop-up video appears with an animation exploring the mission from Earth to the moon and back, with a voiceover from the Apollo 11 command module pilot Michael Collins.
"50 years ago I went on an adventure, which took Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to the surface of the moon for the first time in history," Collins says in the video.
The video, which is just over four minutes and 30 seconds, features the iconic imagery of the moon landing and took a team of 17 to create, along with 13 NASA employees. In the behind-the-scenes video of the Google Doodle's creation, artists and historians walk through the process of designing and scripting the animation.
//www.youtube.com/embed/t6VpHyKXHBM
Width: 800px
Height: 450px
In 1969, a team of 400,000 people contributed to the Apollo 11 mission that put the first man on the moon, in what Armstrong famously called a "giant leap for mankind." Aldrin followed Armstrong onto the moon's surface, while Collins stayed in orbit.
The Apollo 11 mission was a turning point in the "Space Race" between the US and the USSR, since Russian cosmonauts had previously beat the Americans at every turn in advancing space missions. Newly unearthed documents show that the moon landing could have turned deadly on the astronauts' arrival to Earth.
As NASA continues to plan new missions, including putting a woman on the moon for the first time by 2024, the Google Doodle demonstrates how powerful the memory of mankind's first journey to the moon remains today.
- Read more:
- 15 impressive women who made the Apollo moon missions possible
- 8 of the surviving Apollo astronauts got together for the 50th anniversary of the moon landing, and Buzz Aldrin's outfit stole the show
- NASA's Apollo 11 astronauts landed on the moon 50 years ago. Here's every historic Apollo mission explained.