Astronauts worldwide are mourning Neil Armstrong, the first human to walk on the moon, who passed away on Saturday.?
EnlargeThe news of the iconic astronaut Neil Armstrong's death Saturday (Aug. 25) plunged American astronauts and spaceflyers around the world into mourning, with some expressing their sadness on Twitter.
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Armstrong, the?first man to walk on the moon?and commander of NASA's Apollo 11 lunar landing mission,? died at age 82 sue to complications from recent heart surgery, his family said. Armstrong had heart bypass surgery earlier this month to clear blocked arteries.
Many astronauts with NASA and other space agencies cited Armstrong as a major inspiration in their lives in their Twitter messages. Others reflected on the legendary astronaut's modesty, despite his global fame.
"I know I am joined by millions of others in mourning Neil's passing ? a true American hero and the best pilot I ever knew," wrote?Apollo 11?astronaut Buzz Aldrin, who walked with Armstrong on the moon on July 20, 1969, in his Twitter post. He writes as @TheRealBuzz.
Several active and former NASA astronauts wrote that?Armstrong inspired them?to pursue dreams of flying in space.
"I am deeply saddened by the?passing of Neil Armstrong," wrote former astronaut Leroy Chiao (@AstroDude),? four-time spaceflyer and commander the International Space Station. "He was my childhood hero, who inspired me to become an astronaut myself." [Photos: Neil Armstrong ? American Icon Remembered]
Former shuttle astronaut Mae Jemison, the first African-American woman to fly in space, agreed.
"As young girl watching #NeilArmstrong step on the moon, the stars came a little bit closer & my world & expectations quite a bit larger," Jemison wrote as ?@maejemison.
Christopher Ferguson, the commander of NASA's last space shuttle mission (STS-135 in July 2011), was touched by Armstrong's modest demeanor despite his great feats in space.
"Today we lost a legend," Ferguson wrote Saturday as @AstroFerg." Neil was a source of personal inspiration and a humble and unassuming American hero."
But Armstrong was more than just an American icon. His legacy reached out across the entire world, as astronauts from Japan, Canada and Europe pointed out.
"RIP #NeilArmstrong, the 1st moonwalker. He inspired me to fly high," wrote astronaut Soichi Noguchi of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (@Astro_Soichi), who included a photo of the moon in one of his two posts. " Salute to #NeilArmstrong, the 1st moonwalker. He inspired me deeply, long before I become spacewalker."
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