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Teh One Who Knocks
05-22-2012, 06:50 PM
By Clara Moskowitz, Space.com


http://i.imgur.com/19ZcE.jpg

Cape Canaveral, Fla. - Scotty has finally been beamed up. The ashes of the actor James Doohan, who played Scotty on the 1960s television series "Star Trek," were launched to space this morning (May 22) on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.

The unmanned Falcon 9 blasted off at 3:44 a.m. EDT (0744 GMT) from here at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, carrying the Dragon capsule filled with cargo bound for the International Space Station. Also packed aboard the rocket was a secondary payload carrying remains from 308 people, including Doohan and Mercury program astronaut Gordon Cooper, according to ABC News and Reuters.

The ashes were flown under an agreement between the spacecraft's builder, private rocket company SpaceX (Space Exploration Technologies Corp. of Hawthorne, Calif.) and Celestis, a company that books memorial spaceflights to "launch a symbolic portion of your loved one's ashes into space," according to its website.

"We had a Celestis canister on the second stage, not on Dragon," SpaceX president Gwynne Shotwell said at a news conference after the launch. "They've actually been a customer of ours since 2005 or 2006."

The Falcon 9 rocket's second stage separated from the capsule nine minutes and 49 seconds into the flight, and is now orbiting on its own above Earth. The second stage will likely stay in orbit for about a year before it falls back toward the ground and is burned up during re-entry.

In addition to the human ashes, SpaceX's Falcon 9/Dragon flight launched about 1,014 pounds (460 kilograms) of cargo for the space station, including food and supplies for the crew, student-designed science experiments, computer equipment and commemorative souvenirs like mission patches and pins.

Burial in space

Celestis charges $2,995 to launch 1 gram of a person's ashes to Earth orbit. Deep space launches to the solar system start at $12,500, while suborbital flights that return to Earth begin at $995.

The human remains payload was not officially announced by SpaceX before today, although news reports publicized the inclusion of the ashes onboard Falcon 9.

"So much for our 'secret' launch," Charles Chafer, CEO of Celestis' parent company, Space Services Inc., wrote on his Facebook page Sunday (May 20). However, the payload was apparently secret enough to fool SpaceX founder and chief designer Elon Musk.

"If they were onboard I didn't actually know that," Musk said after the liftoff. "I was focused on other things."

Space memorials

This isn't the first launch for Celestis.

Ashes from "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry and his wife Majel Barrett Roddenberry, as well as many others, have been booked on flights by Celestis. The ashes are packed into special capsules and added as payloads on orbital and suborbital rockets.

In fact, the company tried to launch Doohan and Cooper's ashes on an earlier SpaceX flight, but the smaller Falcon 1 rocket carrying them in August 2008 failed to reach space. The company is trying again now as part of its guarantee to send another sample of a person's ashes if a rocket fails to launch the first time.

Today's SpaceX flight was the company's "largest launch event ever," according to Chafer's Facebook page.

Dragon launched Tuesday after an earlier attempt at liftoff was called off at the last second due to an engine valve problem. The issue was fixed and the vehicle had a smooth blastoff into the predawn skies here on the second try.

The Dragon capsule will become the first private spacecraft to rendezvous and berth at the International Space Station when it arrives at the orbiting lab later this week. The mission is the final test flight for SpaceX under NASA's COTS program (Commercial Orbital Transportation Services), which has funded the development of private vehicles capable of delivering cargo to the orbiting laboratory.

Hal-9000
05-22-2012, 06:54 PM
Moment of silence for Scotty.......:(




so they charge 3 grand to shoot a gram of your ashes into orbit....I wonder if they actually launch a container into space and how do they do it?

Teh One Who Knocks
05-22-2012, 07:01 PM
http://i.imgur.com/d3dam.png

Hal-9000
05-22-2012, 07:30 PM
big battles between Doohan and Shatner back in the day...Scotty wasn't even going to be in the first Star Trek movie if Shatner showed up :lol:

Muddy
05-22-2012, 08:17 PM
I hope they just threw the ashes out and didnt add to the space junk with a bunch of capsules..

Hal-9000
05-22-2012, 08:31 PM
I hope they just threw the ashes out and didnt add to the space junk with a bunch of capsules..

that's kinda my question...do they actually launch these little vessels with ashes out of the ship and if so, how?

Acid Trip
05-22-2012, 08:37 PM
What an erotic name for a thread. "SpaceX takes Star Trek's 'Scotty' to the Final Frontier"

Sounds like a porn star named SpaceX just jammed a strap-on up Scotty's bootay.

Hal-9000
05-22-2012, 08:38 PM
What an erotic name for a thread. "SpaceX takes Star Trek's 'Scotty' to the Final Frontier"

Sounds like a porn star named SpaceX just jammed a strap-on up Scotty's bootay.

It's 'after-work' time for you right now isn't it? :lol:

Acid Trip
05-22-2012, 08:47 PM
It's 'after-work' time for you right now isn't it? :lol:

No comment.

I was actually a good boss today. I sent my IT staff home at lunch and told them to enjoy the afternoon. I had to make them work all day Saturday to get a new branch up and running for todays business. Since they worked hard and didn't bitch I'm going to give them all a few afternoons off.

Hal-9000
05-22-2012, 08:48 PM
yep :lol: