No. Astronauts have orbited over the far side of the moon, but have never landed on it. The main reason is that they would be unable to communicate with Earth.
No, there have been no astronauts landing or walking on the far side of the moon. None have landed in darkness there, either. It is considered too dangerous. This is because it is not possible for communication signals to reach the earth from the far side. Also, the terrain is very rough, making finding a landing site difficult in the dark. The landings must take place on the side of the moon facing earth, and in the light.Note: There is no "dark side of the moon" in reality. All sides of the moon get direct sunlight as the moon circles the earth. There is, however, only one side that faces earth, and it is the only side we see from here. That gives the moon a "back side" rather than a dark side.
Only 21 people have ever seen the far side of the Moon; they are all the Apollo astronauts. Since nobody has gone to the Moon in the last 45 years, most people NEVER see the far side of the Moon.
No, up to today no women has landed on the moon or even orbited it.
No one. No woman has been on the moon to date.
The twelve individuals who have landed on the moon so far have all been citizens of the USA.
No they did not
No, there have been no astronauts landing or walking on the far side of the moon. None have landed in darkness there, either. It is considered too dangerous. This is because it is not possible for communication signals to reach the earth from the far side. Also, the terrain is very rough, making finding a landing site difficult in the dark. The landings must take place on the side of the moon facing earth, and in the light.Note: There is no "dark side of the moon" in reality. All sides of the moon get direct sunlight as the moon circles the earth. There is, however, only one side that faces earth, and it is the only side we see from here. That gives the moon a "back side" rather than a dark side.
The far side of the moon is freezing and more hostile. And from that side they , the astronauts would not be heard or receive signals fromN.A.S.A.
No, during the Apollo missions radio contact was cut off when astronauts orbited behind the Moon.
Only 21 people have ever seen the far side of the Moon; they are all the Apollo astronauts. Since nobody has gone to the Moon in the last 45 years, most people NEVER see the far side of the Moon.
It was in the year 1968 , by Apollo 8 astronauts.
No, up to today no women has landed on the moon or even orbited it.
No one. No woman has been on the moon to date.
None of the astronauts who have been to the moon experienced a lunar eclipse while actually on the moon. The timing of lunar eclipses is unpredictable and there were no planned missions during an eclipse.
All the Apollo landings were on the near side as opposed to the far side (a better term than "dark side", since it isn't actually any darker... statistically, it's very slightly lighter than the near side).However, all the missions which involved a landing, plus a few others, did take the astronauts completely around the Moon. Astronauts on Apollo 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, and 17 did get to see the far side of the Moon.
So far the 12 astronauts who walked on the moon were all Americans, no Arab has gone or walked on the moon.
The term "dark side of the moon" is a misnomer, as the moon experiences day and night like Earth. Astronauts could land on the far side of the moon - the side that is never visible from Earth - but communications with Earth would be challenging and require relay satellites.