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DESARROLLO

DEL TALLER DE INGLÉS


Hecho por Alison Campos - Noveno
INFORMACIÓN DEL TALLER

01 TALLER HECHO POR


Alison Campos Terán 02 CURSO
Noveno IV-2

03 SEMANA
Tercera semana
04 ASIGNATURA
Inglés
TO SOLVE - A SOLUCIONAR
- Write a paragraph with a historical fact in the
world, use 4 sentences in passive voice.
- Escriba un párrafo con un hecho histórico en
el mundo, utilice 4 oraciones en voz pasiva.
CONTEXT: CONTEXTO:
Before starting, I want to clarify Antes de empezar, quiero aclarar
that the historical event will be que el evento histórico será nada
nothing more nor less than the más y nada menos que el alunizaje
Apollo 11 Moon landing. I will use del Apolo 11. Utilizaré la voz
the passive voice in the text as pasiva en el texto tan
often as I can, using their frecuentemente como pueda,
respective rules. Once this has usando sus respectivas reglas. Una
been said, lets begin. vez dicho esto, comencemos.
SOLUCIÓN – SOLUTION:
On July 20, 1969 the American mission Apollo 11, placed the first men on the Moon:
the commander Neil Armstrong and the pilot Edwin F. Aldrin. When the Eagle module
landed on the Sea of Tranquility, the live images were followed on television by some
600 million people. Although it is true that the most famous date related to the arrival
of man on the moon is July 20, 1969, the final mission itself took off from the
Kennedy Space Center in Florida four days earlier, on July 16. The total mission
lasted just over 195 hours - more than eight days. The Apollo 11 mission was the first
to reach the moon, but since the Apollo 8 mission the program began the conquest of
space as part of the space race against the Soviet Union, which was the first to launch
a man beyond the Earth's atmosphere in 1961: astronaut Yuri Gagarin, who once
orbited the Earth.
TAKEOFF & LANDING
On July 16, 1969, at 13:32 hours, the
Saturn V rocket takes off from Cape
Canaveral (Florida, USA) with three
astronauts on board and only one
objective: to reach the Moon. Four days
later, Armstrong and Aldrin land on the
moon aboard the Eagle Module, while
Collins keeps the Columbia in orbit.
After reuniting, they return to Earth and
land safely in the Pacific Ocean on July
24, eight days after the start of the
operation.
CURIOSE DATA:

The Apollo program involved an investment of $24 billion. More than 400,000 workers
participated in its development. The rocket, the spacecraft and the lunar module were
made up of 5,600,000 parts, and although they all operated at 99.9% efficiency, up to
5,600 breakdowns could have occurred. Any cell phone today has more memory than
the computer that Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins had on board. Kennedy had already
made it clear in 1962, when he proclaimed that America wanted to go to the moon, "not
because it is easy, but because it is difficult," and he called the challenge "the greatest
and most dangerous adventure that man has ever embarked upon. Today, more than
four decades after Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins completed their extraordinary feat,
JFK's definition still holds true. The summit of this cosmic Everest was reached, but not
without a very high level of risk. In fact, the Apollo 11 astronauts have acknowledged
that they started the journey knowing that their chances of successfully reaching the
Moon and returning to Earth alive were around 50%.
CONCLUSIONS:
NASA's gamble was very risky, and multiple factors could have turned the
mission into a tragic disaster, in front of 600 million television viewers.
Although at the end Armstrong managed to take his "one small step for man,
one giant leap for mankind", today we know that astronauts suffered serious
difficulties. Was a reckless journey to another world. A jump into the void in an
alien territory without atmosphere. A madness from 400,000 kilometers away.
There was no precedent. No way to predict what was going to happen when
the ship landed. And there was no room for error. On July 16, 1969, the crew
of Apollo 11 only knew for sure where they intended to go, but they had every
reason to wonder if they would ever set foot on their own planet again.
“It suddenly struck me that that tiny
pea, pretty and blue, was the Earth.”
—NEIL ALDEN ARMSTRONG
THE END
THANKS
Hecho por
Alison Valentina Campos Terán
para la asignatura de Inglés
Bvirtual 2020
CREDITS: This presentation template was
Noveno
created by Slidesgo, including IV-2
icons by Flaticon
and infographics & images by Freepik.

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