2019 July 17 
 
 
  
 Explanation:  
It had never been done before.
But with the words "You're Go for landing", 
50 years ago 
this Saturday, Apollo 11 astronauts 
Aldrin and 
Armstrong were cleared to make the 
first try.
The next few minutes would contain more than a 
bit of drama, as an unexpected boulder field and an unacceptably sloping crater loomed below. 
With fuel dwindling, 
Armstrong 
coolly rocketed the lander above the lunar surface as 
he looked for a clear and flat place to land. 
With only seconds of fuel remaining, and with the help of 
Aldrin and 
mission control calling out data, 
Armstrong finally found a safe spot -- and put 
the Eagle down. 
Many people on Earth listening to the live audio felt great relief on hearing "The Eagle has landed", and 
great pride knowing that for the first time ever, 
human beings were on 
the Moon.
Combined in the 
featured descent video are two audio feeds, a video feed similar to 
what the astronauts saw, captions of the dialog, 
and data including the tilt of the Eagle lander.
The video concludes with the 
panorama of the lunar landscape visible 
outside the Eagle.
A few hours later, 
hundreds of millions of people across planet 
Earth, drawn 
together as a single species, 
watched fellow humans walk on the Moon.