Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Drive the Tesla Like You're a Starman

The deep-space duo have come full circle around the Sun.

Mike Wall at Spaceflight at narrates the Captain's Log as you try not to hear Picard's voice in these words:
"The duo wrapped up their first solar orbit over the weekend, according to the tracking site whereisroadster.com. Starman and the Tesla have an orbital period of about 557 Earth days, the website calculated, and they've been in space for 560 days as of Monday (Aug. 19).

At launch, the Roadster's radio was playing David Bowie's "Life on Mars." If the car's battery is still working, Starman has now heard the song more than 150,000 times, according to the tracking site. And the site provides some other interesting tidbits as well. For example, the Tesla has now traveled more than 760 million miles (1.2 billion kilometers) in space, meaning the car has exceeded its 36,000-mile (58,000 km) warranty more than 21,000 times over.

Debut flights by rockets are inherently risky, which explains why SpaceX chose to put a dummy payload rather than a functional satellite on the February 2018 Falcon Heavy launch. Musk has said he chose Starman and the Roadster for fun, but the car likely serves a marketing purpose as well. (Musk also runs Tesla, of course.)"
The graphic is from 'Where is Roadster dot Com; a website dedicated to tracking the Starman / Tesla duo as it drives around the Sun at 75,000 MPH. The website also goes out of its way to declare, "Please note that this site is not in any way affiliated with Tesla, SpaceX, or Elon Musk. I’m just this guy, you know?"

H/t: This guy