When Michael Collins floated across the moon during the 1969 Apollo 11 mission, he knew he would be remembered as the loneliest person in history. He thinks about everything on the other side of the moon, barely cheering, almost cheering, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on the moon, and beyond, everything that every creature and human being on earth has ever built. On his side was, as Collins wrote in his memoirs, “What does one God know?”
Half a century later, the famous moon scenery in the sky is beginning to get busy. Not only are NASA and other space agencies preparing to send humans to the moon for a longer period of time, researchers around the world are working on the blueprint, transforming them into the most powerful astrophysics laboratory in history. This can address the deepest questions we have ever asked. How did the first star ignite? Why did the universe evolve as it did? Is there anyone else?
“On the moon, here we can think of the concept that it is completely impossible to achieve.” Yang Harmsan astronomer at the Institute of Science in Gran Sasso in Italy. The conditions there seem to be intended to house a state-of-the-art observatory that can answer some of the most bewildering questions about the Cosmos. The unique peace and tranquility of the moon, especially on its non-earthly side, can be a portal to the history of the universe, from the mystical dark energy that extends from the first galaxy…