Dr. Buzz Aldrin
Buzz Aldrin, Ph.D.
grew up in Montclair, New Jersey. His mother, Marion Moon, was the
daughter of an Army Chaplain and his father Edwin Eugene Aldrin was an
aviation pioneer. Buzz graduated one year early from Montclair High
School and he attended the US Military Academy at West Point, graduating
third in his class with a BS in mechanical engineering. He then joined
the Air Force where he flew F86 Sabre Jets in 66 combat missions in
Korea, shot down two MIG-15’s, and was decorated with the Distinguished
Flying Cross. After a tour of duty in Germany flying F100’s, he earned
earn his Doctorate of Science in Astronautics at MIT and wrote his
thesis on Manned Orbital Rendezvous.
Selected by NASA in 1963 into the third group of astronauts, Buzz was
the first with a doctorate and became known as “Dr. Rendezvous”. The
docking and rendezvous techniques he devised for spacecraft in Earth and
lunar orbit became critical to the success of the Gemini and Apollo
programs, and are still used today. He pioneered underwater training
techniques to simulate spacewalking. In 1966 on the Gemini 12 orbital
mission, Buzz performed the world’s first successful spacewalk
— extra-vehicular activity (EVA), and set a new EVA record of 5 1/2
hours. During that mission he also took the first “selfie” in space.
On July 20, 1969, Buzz and Neil Armstrong made their historic Apollo 11
moonwalk, becoming the first two humans to set foot on another world. An
estimated 600 million people — at that time, the world’s largest
television audience in history — witnessed this unprecedented heroic
endeavor.
Upon returning from the moon, Buzz was decorated with the Presidential
Medal of Freedom and numerous awards all over the world. Named after
Buzz are Asteroid “6470 Aldrin” and the “Aldrin Crater” on the moon. In
2011 along with his Apollo 11 crew mates Neil Armstrong and Michael
Collins, he received the Congressional Gold Medal.
Buzz is the author of 9 books, most recently his children’s book,
Welcome to Mars: Making a Home on the Red Planet and
his newest NY Times and Washington Post Bestseller,
No Dream Is Too High: Life Lessons from
a Man Who Walked on the Moon. Both published by National Geographic.
In October of 2014 he revamped his
ShareSpace Foundation to be focused
on STEAM Education — Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math to
ignite the spark and fuel excitement for space in kids — Specifically for
K-8. In August of 2015 he launched the
Buzz Aldrin Space Institute at
Florida Tech to promote and develop his vision of a permanent human
settlement on the planet Mars.
Since retiring from NASA and the U.S. Air Force, Col. Aldrin calls
himself a Global Statesman for Space and has remained a tireless
advocate for human space exploration.
Watch
Buzz Aldrin — Q&A,
Buzz Aldrin interview on Charlie Rose, and
Buzz Aldrin Describes Walking on the Moon.
Watch his YouTube channel.
Listen to
Buzz Aldrin on Howard Stern Full Interview.
Read his
Wikipedia profile.
View his Facebook page.
Follow his
Twitter feed.