Ashes into space?
I can see the aliens opening up the craft and having them wonder if it’s a pyramid? Or if they sacrificed this being to insure a good result?
I wonder how much fuel was expended to get THAT into space?
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NEW HORIZONS EXPLORATION TARGET 2014 MU69 OCCULTS A STAR
On July 17, 2017 at 03:50 UTC, members of the New Horizons science team successfully observed Kuiper belt object 2014 MU69 passing in front of a background star in the constellation Sagittarius.
The 24 frames in this animation were separated by 0.2 seconds apiece. In each 0.2 seconds, the shadow of 2014 MU69 passed 4 kilometers across Earth's surface. Observations like these will allow the team to constrain the size and position of the New Horizons mission's flyby target, improving the precision of their encounter planning.
This animation has been processed from the originally published version to reduce noise and align the star field.
The New Horizons team enjoyed strong support from Argentinian scientists, government officials, and locals, who went above and beyond to ensure mission success.
Ive been calling the people who helped us, our twelfth player, [team member Mark] Buie said. The Comodoro Rivadavia community came together and did some amazing things for us. A major national highway was closed for two hours to keep car headlights away. Street lights were turned off to ensure absolute darkness. People like the Intendente or Mayor of the Comodoro parked trucks as wind breaks. Said Buie, The local people were a major team player.
Planning for this complex astronomical deployment started just a few months ago and although the odds seem daunting -- like finding a needle in a haystack -- the team succeeded, thanks to the help of institutions like CONAE (Argentina's National Commission on Space Activities), and all the goodwill of the Argentinian people. This is another example of how space exploration brings out the best in us, said New Horizons Program Executive Adriana Ocampo.
This sounds like a story from Star Trek or Star Wars.
It’s a shame the object cannot be radiologically dated. I might expect some material out there to be a by product of an earlier stellar system.
I think our best bet for deep space exploration is by hijacking an asteroid. Land a nuclear powered probe on it that embeds deeply into the rock, then starts up an ion thruster engine with a big tank of xenon propellant.
As has been demonstrated, this could produce speeds in excess of 10km/sec. The body of the asteroid would take the brunt of any collisions in space. “In the wild”, some asteroids reach speeds of 25km/sec, so any momentum we could add to would be a bonus.
Aliens will open the can and add water and reconstitute Clyde Tombaugh DNA and then grow a new Clyde Tombaugh.
On 9/11?