NASA's chief is worried about Brighton

There's a moon rock in the lobby of NASA's Washington, D.C., headquarters. Visitors are urged to rub their fingers over its smooth, worn surface to connect with one of the greatest achievements in human history: the Apollo missions that landed 12 American men on the moon. The rock is from the very last visit: Apollo 17, which returned to Earth in 1972. No one has returned to the moon since. And while NASA has done astonishing things over and over since Apollo — in recent years alone, it's flown a helicopter on Mars, smashed a spacecraft into an asteroid, and begun to redefine our basic understandings of space with the James Webb Space Telescope — the glory days of the moon landings feel, at times, like ancient history.

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