Ilona Mask rocket will send 150 capsules with human residues into space: what is the essence of the mission
Previously, the company used various rockets, but a new launch of memorial cargo containing more than 150 DNA capsules and the remains of people will take place on Falcon 9 O 00:18 in Kiev, Tuesday, June 24, Space writes. In focus. Technology has appeared its Telegram channel.
Subscribe not to miss the latest and most intrusive news from the world of science! Celestis has concluded an agreement on cooperation with the European Manufacturer of Space Apparatus and Ships The Exploration Company (TEC). This company develops a NYX spacecraft, which is designed to deliver goods to orbit. The second prototype of the NYX ship called Mission Possible will send Falcon 9 rocket to space, and more than 150 capsules with creamy residues and customer DNA samples will be on board.
For the first time, the TEC spacecraft will deliver useful customers' cargo in orbit. The full version of the NYX ship should go into space in 2028 and stretch with the International Space Station. The spacecraft will reach a low Earth orbit and will make two or three turns around our planet before it enters the Earth's atmosphere. Then the memorial capsules will land in the Pacific, where they will be pulled and returned to customers as souvenirs.
Celestis will also create a story by making three -year -old Matteo Bart with the youngest German (and the youngest European in general), who sent his DNA into space. Inside Mission Possible Tec, the child will symbolically join Ditter Bart, his late grandfather whose remains will go into space. According to focus, Ilon Musk promises more risky launches after the sixth catastrophe of Starship rocket.
SpaceX, Ilona Muska, has already been tested by SpaceX rocket, but six times the flight has been unsuccessful, which ended in a disaster. This raises the question of whether or not at all successful launch. Focus also wrote that a strange "label" appeared on the moon, NASA's satellite saw her from orbit. Recently, NASA's orbital apparatus has taken a picture of the fall of the Japanese landing module.