T-minus-1 year: The moon is on the rise as Apollo 11’s 50th anniversary approaches

NASA astronaut Buzz Aldrin salutes the U.S. flag during 1969’s Apollo 11 mission to the moon. (NASA Photo / Neil Armstrong)

Forty-nine years ago today, humans first set foot on a world beyond Earth — and by the time the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 lunar landing rolls around, a year from now, there’s likely to be more moon milestones to celebrate.

Today NASA’s myriad Twitter accounts are buzzing with #NationalMoonDay shout-outs, and the space agency’s website is filled with links to Apollo 11 lore.

You can bet next year’s #Apollo50 observances will take on a far higher profile. Even Seattle’s Museum of Flight is getting in on the action: Apollo 11 artifacts on loan from the Smithsonian, including the Columbia command module, will be on display starting next April and running through the 50th anniversary.

But the year ahead isn’t just about past glories: We’re due to see a ramping-up of missions to the moon, in part because of the Trump administration’s initiative aimed at lunar exploration and settlement.

This week, NASA released a list of more than two dozen companies that are interested in a NASA program aimed at supporting the delivery of commercial payloads to the lunar surface.

The list includes the heavy-hitters of the commercial space effort (Aerojet Rocketdyne, Blue Origin, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman / Orbital ATK, Sierra Nevada Corp., SpaceX and United Launch Alliance) as well as scrappier veterans of past XPRIZE competitions (Astrobotic, Masten Space Systems, Moon Express, PTScientists, TeamIndus).

There’s even a Seattle company that’s voiced interest in the moon race: Spaceflight Industries, which has struck deals for launch logistics with several of the aforementioned ventures.