![]() ![]() He was famed for playing the role of Chief Engineer Montgomery Scott aboard the starship Enterprise on Star Trek: The Original Series. James Doohan in 2004 receiving his star on the Hollywood Walk of FameĮveryone, both Star Trek fans and non-fans alike, knows James Doohan. They are currently under a 300 million-dollar contract to deliver supplies to the space station for NASA and are hoping to sign a 1.6 billion-dollar contract to make those deliveries regular. SpaceX is an aerospace company that carries out contracts with NASA and other government and private agencies to help launch satellites into space sending the remains of famous celebrities into space isn’t their only role. ![]() “He’ll be there with his buddy, which is wonderful,” said Doohan’s agent and longtime friend, Steve Stevens, speaking of Star Trek creator, Gene Roddenberry. However, the Falcon 9 launch is not expected to incur any failures and should successfully and finally bring Scotty to the stars. The company previously attempted to send a portion of Doohan’s ashes into orbit back in 2008 aboard the Falcon 1, but the rocket failed to achieve orbit and was destroyed in atmospheric reentry. spread, and what might re-enter and survive, versus what not, those are the things that are the unknown," he said.On Tuesday May 22nd, SpaceX launched the Falcon 9 from Cape Canaveral, Florida carrying James “Scotty” Doohan’s cremated remains into space along with those of of 307 other individuals (including Mercury astronaut Gordon Cooper). "It's predictable that the thing is going to decay but exactly how and where will the debris. The debris falling from the sky Thursday night was somewhat expected because it had been up for a couple of weeks, slowly decaying in its orbit. Space Command have developed and maintained a catalogue of the anthropogenic space objects and try their best to predict when two of these objects might come close to each other to collide, and warn people. So whenever they die, they rain down on the space stations, Jah said.īut is it possible to predict these events beforehand? You could just say that these unscheduled events are part of the statistics," he added.Īccording to him, there are currently over 26,000 anthropogenic objects in space, of which about 3,500 are currently serving a purpose while everything else is garbage.Ī lot of the satellites that are put into earth's orbits are orbiting above the earth's space stations. "The business of conducting space operations, by and large, it's actually quite successful and these things do happen and it's statistical. (Reuters)Įvents like these educate the public on the realities of doing business in space and Jah says it's surprising that equipment doesn't fail more often. Jah added that there’s no way to really predict where the debris and decaying materials from rockets might re-enter. Given that most of the earth is covered by water and the largest body of that is the Pacific, things that survive reentry, by and large, basically pollute the ocean," he said. "There's so much uncertainty when things hit the atmosphere. Jah said larger objects are more likely to not fully burn up in the atmosphere, especially if the angle of reentry is not steep enough. Moriba Jah, an associate professor in aerospace engineering at the University of Texas at Austin, says the rocket was supposed to "slow itself down in calculated way to force it to re-enter and burn up in the atmosphere."īecause that controlled, scheduled, manoeuvre did not happen, it was left to mother nature to clean it up which is unpredictable. National Weather Service in Seattle has said there is not expected to be any impact on the ground. Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist at Harvard University, tweeted that the cause appeared to be the remains of the second stage of a Falcon 9 rocket used by SpaceX to launch a satellite earlier this month. Duration 0:57 Observers in B.C., Washington state and Oregon captured what is believed to be the remains of a rocket used by SpaceX. ![]()
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