Google marked the 40th anniversary of the first human footstep on the moon by adding virtual lunar exploration to its free online Earth map and imagery service. — Photo by AFP

SAN FRANCISCO Google on Monday marked the 40th anniversary of the first human footstep on the moon by adding virtual lunar exploration to its free online Earth map and imagery service.

The moon joins Earth, Mars, and Sky in an options list in an upper tool bar on the main Web page at earth.google.com. Aspiring lunar explorers will need Google Earth 5.0 software, which can be downloaded free.

Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin, the first person to walk on the moon, joined Google, X Prize Foundation, and NASA officials in Washington, D.C., for the launch of Moon in Google Earth.

'Forty years ago, two human beings walked on the moon,' said Moon in Google Earth product manager Michael Weiss-Malik.

'It's now possible for anyone to follow in their footsteps. We're giving hundreds of millions of people around the world unprecedented access to an interactive 3D presentation of the Apollo missions.' Moon in Google Earth meshes 'Street View' style panoramic photographs and NASA video taken on the surface of the moon to create a virtual moonscape.

Apollo program astronauts Jack Schmitt and Aldrin provided narration for online lunar tours.

'This tool will make it easier for millions of people to learn about space, our moon and some of the most significant and dazzling discoveries humanity has accomplished together,' said X Prize Foundation trustee Anousheh Ansari, the first female private space explorer.

'I believe that this educational tool is a critical step into the future, a way to both develop the dreams of young people globally, and inspire new audacious goals.'Moon incorporates images taken during Apollo missions and pictures from satellites.
Along with tours of the moon's surface, Google Earth's new feature shows 'human artifacts' left there by space missions.

'We're excited to be a part of this latest chapter in Google's efforts to bring virtual exploration of the moon to anyone with a computer,' said NASA Ames Research Center director Pete Worden.

The center is near Mountain View, California-based Google and has been collaborating with the Internet titan under the auspices of a Space Act Agreement signed in late 2006.

'With Google Earth, young explorers around the world can bounce around the galaxy in Sky, fly to Mars and now visit the moon from wherever they may be,' Ansari said. 'Outer space doesn't seem so far away anymore.' — AFP

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