12 human space oddities
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I wonder if a banana was sent to space? đ
A huge variety of objects, many of them completely unconnected with scientific research, have been launched into orbitâand beyondâover the past 60 years: A golf ball. Pizza. A hip-hop song. An Andy Warhol sketch. (and not his iconic banana featured on the Velvet Underground & Nico album đ ).
Some of these things are sent for purely symbolic or political purposes. Others for communication: We hope that something or someone will find them and get a sense of what kind of species we are, possibly even sending a friendly greeting in reply or some of their own iconic stuff. But maybe we also wish to make the vast expanse of the universe feel a little more human and home-likeâa backyard instead of an abyss.
âThereâs no overarching reason why people send things into space,â says independent researcher and artist Paul Quast, formerly a graduate student at the University of Edinburgh. âThere are all these different philosophies and different aspects of [human] psyche contributing to it.â
This was the second gorilla suit destined for space.
Quast compiled his own list of cultural items sent into space, including radio transmissions, advertising messages, and artifacts. (And he is at work on an updated list.) Quast says the list features âsome truly fantastical and weird stuff.â
Some of the objects flown into space, including a recent consignment of dinosaur bones, have returned to Earth, increasing both their symbolic and economic value, says space archaeologist and art historian Justin Walsh of Californiaâs Chapman University. Such âspaceflownâ objects are now often found at auctions dominated by wealthy collectors.
âSpace seems foreign, dangerous, and beyond the grasp of everyone,â says Walsh. But âas spaceflown objects become more common, both their symbolic and economic significance are likely to decrease.â
In any case, the craze for launching stuff into the outer reaches of the universe doesnât seem likely to let up any time soon. So far, then, hereâs a quick tour through some of the stuff weâve sent into the beyond.
1. A hip-hop song
The first hip-hop song destined for another planet has been transmitted to Venus, according to NASAâS Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The 4-minute songââThe Rain (Supa Dupa Fly)â by Missy Elliotâwas transmitted on July 12 this year by the Deep Space Network, an array of giant radio antennas that send commands to distant space probes. This was the second song transmitted by the DSN. (The first one, delivered in 2008, was the Beatles song âAcross the Universe.â) The Jet Propulsion Laboratory has a sense of humour. The latest work samples the song âI Canât Stand the Rainâ recorded by Ann Peebles in 1973, but the hellish surface of Venus hasnât seen rain for billions of yearsâthough itâs likely that it once did.
2. An Andy Warhol sketch
This artwork was part of a project by the American sculptor Forrest Myers, who asked five of his artist friendsâWarhol, painters Robert Rauschenberg and David Novros, and sculptors John Chamberlain and Claes Oldenbergâto create sketches to be inscribed on a ceramic wafer that would be launched to the moon. NASA didnât approve, however, and so Myers arranged secretly for the wafer to form one of the tiles on the Apollo 12 lander, which touched-down on the lunar surface in 1969; although itâs never been confirmed, it seems the sketches are still on the moon. Warhol later claimed that his sketch included a monogram formed from his initials, A.Wâbut to others it looked somewhat like you know... a penis.
3.  Golf balls
The Apollo 14 astronaut Alan Shepard smuggled two golf balls onto the lunar surface in 1971, where he proceeded to swing at themâone-handed, in his spacesuitâwith a customized six-iron head attached to a lunar sampling tool. Shepard had hoped that the lower lunar gravityâabout a sixth of Earthâsâwould allow him to make record-setting shots. But he shanked the first ball into a nearby crater, and then claimed that heâd hit the second ball for âmiles and miles and miles.â Expert analysis, however, using photographs taken by the Apollo 14 astronauts and images from NASAâS Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, revealed that the second of Shepardâs golf swings had only propelled the ball about 120 feet.
4. An electric car
The founder of SpaceX and the Tesla electric car company, Elon Musk, was behind a 2018 project to place a Tesla Roadster into orbit around the sun, along with a space-suited dummy named âStarman.â The stunt was designed to highlight the payload carrying capacity of the new Falcon Heavy rockets from SpaceX. As he began his orbits, the âStarmanâ dummy was âlisteningâ on a music player to two David Bowie tracks, one in each ear: âSpace Oddityâ and âIs There Life on Mars?â The carâs glove box also contained a copy of the Douglas Adams' novel The Hitchhikerâs Guide to the Galaxy and a digital disk of the works of the science-fiction author Isaac Asimov. âStarmanâ and his Tesla are still in orbit around the sun today.
5.  Jellyfish
Bags containing over 2,000 jellyfish âpolypsâ (baby jellyfish) flew in 1991 on the space shuttle Columbia, along with a supply of artificial seawater, to determine how the creatures would develop in microgravity. Not only did they develop normally, they thrivedâand by the end of the mission nine days later, more than 60,000 juvenile jellyfish were alive in space. Once they got back to Earth, however, the space jellyfish couldnât swim properly under normal gravity because they couldnât tell up from downâand space scientists think humans reared in microgravity might have the same problem.
6.  Dinosaur bones
The skeletal remains of these ancient animals have been launched into space at least four separate times, most recently onboard a Blue Origin rocket in 2021. In that case, they were the remains of a bird-like raptor named Dromaeosaurus, which stood about 2 feet tall at the hip. When they returned to Earth, fragments of the dinosaur bones were auctioned off for charity. It seems that the first dinosaur bone  intended for space made liftoff in 1985, when a piece of vertebrae and an eggshell from a baby of the dinosaur species Maiasaura flew on the space shuttle Challenger. (It was lost when the Challenger exploded 73 seconds after liftoff.) It was followed in 1998 by a skull from the species Coelophysis, which was carried aboard the space shuttle Endeavor; and by bones from a Tyrannosaurus rex that flew on a test flight of NASAâs Orion spacecraft in 2014.
7.  Pieces of the Wright Flyer
Fragments of wood and cloth from the historic Wright Flyerâthe worldâs first powered aircraft, which took off in 1903âwere carried to the surface of the moon in 1969 by Neil Armstrong on Apollo 11, so that parts of it were on the lunar lander Eagle for the first moon landing. A 1986 flight by the space shuttle Challenger would have taken a note written by Orville Wright and fragments from the Wright Flyer into orbit, but the shuttle exploded a little more than a minute after launch, killing all seven of its astronauts. Most recently, fabric from the Wright Flyer was carried on Ingenuity, a helicopter that landed on Mars with the Perseverance rover in 2021; Ingenuity then made 67 flights on the Red Planetâthe first flights beyond Earthâwhile carrying a piece of the first aircraft.
8.  Pizza
In a shameless marketing ploy, Pizza Hut used a resupply rocket to send a pizza to a Russian crew on the International Space Station in 2001, for a cost of around $1 million; television advertisements then showed the cosmonauts eating the pizza, alongside footage from the launch of an earlier resupply rocket that the cash-strapped Russian space agency had decorated with the Pizza Hut logo. Spending time in space deadens taste buds, so the pizza was made with extra salt and spices, and regular salami was used because the usual pepperoni would have gone moldy by the time it arrived in orbit. NASAâs astronauts on the ISS at the time were forbidden from eating the pizza, however, because of the agencyâs strict rules about corporate sponsorship.
9.  Red paint
In 2003, a sample of the red paint famously used on Ferrari carsâa colour known as âRosso Corsaââwas sealed in glass and launched with ESAâs Mars Express spacecraft to the Red Planet. The paint was subject to rigorous tests before the launch to determine that the sample would survive the journey, during which it reached speeds of three kilometers every secondâmuch faster than any Earth-bound Ferrari. The paint sample was attached to the Mars Express orbiter, which still circles the planetânot on its Beagle 2 lander, which failed during its descent.
10.  Legos
Figures from the childrenâs block toy Lego have been sent into space several times; the first time seems to have been on the launch of a sounding rocket in 1980, which crossed the KĂĄrmĂĄn Line before it returned to Earth. The latest Legos to be sent into space were figurines representing the early Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei, the Roman god Jupiter, and the goddess Juno, which were on board NASAâs Juno probe when it launched in 2011. Juno entered orbit around Jupiter in 2016 and is still working while carrying its tiny plastic crew.
11.  A gorilla costume
In 2016 the astronaut Scott Kelly dressed up in a smuggled gorilla suit as a prank, and wore it while he pursued other astronauts around the International Space Station. This was apparently the second gorilla suit destined for space: Astronaut Mark KellyâScott Kellyâs identical twin and now a U.S. Senatorâsmuggled the first on board a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket for a 2015 launch, but it was destroyed when the uncrewed rocket exploded shortly after lift-off.
12.  Slime
Packages from Nickelodeon of this gooey childâs toy were launched to the International Space Station in 2020. Its main purpose seems to have been a celebration of the cable channelâs Kidâs Choice Awards, but there were also serious reasons: Toy slime is a non-Newtonian liquid that flows differently than regular liquids like water, and astronauts wanted to observe its behavior in microgravity. It was also a popular diversion among the crew, who made several videos demonstrating the unique properties of slime in space.Â
via Tom Metcalfe
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