Elon Musk is sending a Roadster beyond mars
Elon Musk has announced to send a Tesla Roadster beyond Mars in a Falcon Heavy Rocket, Elon Musk has shared various photos of the car
being ready for launch at SpaceX headquarters. He posted many photos on the popular social platform Instagram which
shows the Roadster attached to a fitting and placed between the two
halves of the payload fairing that caps the rocket. The photos were
posted sometime after a leaked picture of the car created the buzz that showed a grainy view of the car being readied for its ride to the red planet.
This will be the inaugural flight of the Falcon Heavy, a
rocket that SpaceX has been planning for years. The Falcon Heavy is a successor to the
Falcon 9 , it is equipped with three boosters strapped
together, all of which will add enough thrust to make it the most
powerful rocket in the world. It will give SpaceX the ability to send
bigger payloads to space while also helping the company push farther out
into the Solar System.
But SpaceX doesn’t want to put a valuable payload on the
very first flight, which even Musk has admitted could end (or begin)
with an explosion. So the company plans to use a “dummy payload”
instead. “Test flights of new rockets usually contain mass simulators in
the form of concrete or steel blocks. That seemed extremely boring,”
Musk wrote on Instagram today. “Of course, anything boring is terrible,
especially companies, so we decided to send something unusual, something
that made us feel.”
In April, Musk said he was trying to think of the “silliest thing we can imagine”
to stick on top that first Falcon Heavy rocket. And on December 1st, we
learned exactly what that meant. “Payload will be my midnight cherry
Tesla Roadster playing Space Oddity,” Musk wrote on Twitter. “Destination is Mars orbit. Will be in deep space for a billion years or so if it doesn’t blow up on ascent.”
After some back and forth about whether he was joking, it is clear that Musk meant what he wrote. And there’s nothing really
standing in his way . So hopefully we ca see a car going to distances that weren't covered yet.
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