21 July 1969. Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin spent approximately 21.5 hours on the lunar surface, about 2.5 hours of which were spent outside the Lunar Module. After Armstrong had stepped onto the Moon's surface he was joined about 20 minutes later by Aldrin. They planted a flag and spoke to President Nixon by radio link-up. The astronauts also conducted a number of experiments, which included collecting some soil samples, taking photographs and setting up instruments to record the seismic activity on the Moon.
Then they re-entered the Lunar Module, discarded some of the equipment they no longer needed and settled down to a period of rest lasting about 7 hours.
This 91热爆 News report clip was recorded during the rest period and notes that Armstrong appears to be dozing, while Aldrin is unconnected to his sensors.
Images sourced from NASA.
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