NASA's astronaut Kathy Sullivan created history, touched Earth's deepest point Challenger Deep


NASA Astronaut: Former NASA astronaut Dr. Kelly Sullivan created a record by touching Challenger Deep of Mariana Trench, the deepest point on Earth. She is the first woman in the world who has also gone to space and has also reached Challenger Deep.

Marika's Dr. Kathy Sullivan has recorded a unique record in her name on Sunday. 68 years old Dr. Sullivan is the first person in the world to have kissed the heights of space and also measured the deepest points of the sea. Not only this, the former astronaut of the US Space Agency NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration), Dr. Kathy Sullivan is the first American woman to walk in space. Now he has also touched Challenger Deep, 7 miles down in the deepest Mariana Trench on Earth.

NBT

Spent an hour and a half

Dr. Sullivan has done this with a logistics company named EYOS Expeditions. He was accompanied by explorer Victor El Vescovo. The two spent about an hour and a half at Challenger Deep. Then after about 4 hours he returned to his ship and talked to the astronauts of the International Space Station about 254 miles up.

Experience was extraordinary

Dr. Sullivan said after the feat, "Being an Astronaut and Oceanographer hybrid, it was an extraordinary day, happening once in a lifetime, watching Challenger Deep and then comparing notes with ISS peers." ' Mariana Trench is about 200 miles southwest of Guam.

History has been created even before

Dr. Sullivan joined NASA in 1978. She was part of the group of first American astronauts that included women. On October 11, 1984, she became the first American woman to walk in space. Dr. In her second mission to Sullivan Space, Discovery went by space shuttle. The Hubble Space Telescope was launched during this mission. Hubble is an observatory revolving in the Earth's orbit, which has been captured in amazing cameras in the last 30 years.

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