In 1972, during NASA’s Apollo 16 mission, astronaut Charlie Duke left behind more than footprints on the lunar surface, he placed a small, deeply personal object that still rests there today.
A key tool used in the successful Apollo 16 mission is up for grabs in a new auction. The moon scoop that successfully collected samples of rock from the moon in 1972 can finally be yours.
In 1972, Apollo 16 astronaut and moon walker Charlie Duke left a family photo on the lunar surface. Today that photo is long gone. But Duke’s visage is heading back to the moon this week, in a novel ...
Apollo 16 astronaut Charlie Duke, one of only 12 people to walk on the Moon, is cheering on NASA’s return to deep space. Speaking ahead of Artemis, Duke called the program a “great adventure” and sees ...
SAN FRANCISCO - A true space hero was in San Francisco last week for a NASA conference about the future of space and technology. Now 88 years old, Charles Duke is a retired general fighter pilot, test ...
Host Tom Fowler interviews Apollo 16 astronaut Charles Duke about his career with NASA. Apollo 16 lunar module pilot and astronaut Charles Duke explores his journey from NASA’s astronaut program to ...
Click to open image viewer. NASA issued this Omega Speedmaster chronograph to astronaut Charles Duke l for use during the Apollo 16 mission of April 1972. Selected after a series of rigorous tests ...
19.4 x 18.7 cm. (7.6 x 7.4 in.) Subscribe now to view details for this work, and gain access to over 18 million auction results. Purchase One-Day Pass ...