Elon Musk Makes It Official: Falcon Heavy is Taking Tesla Roadster to Mars

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Elon Musk Makes It Official: Falcon Heavy is Taking Tesla Roadster to Mars “A Red Car for the Red Planet.”

What sounded like a prank when SpaceX CEO Elon Musk firstborn floated it earlier this month became real Friday: His car is headed to outer space.

Musk confirmed on his Instagram that the long-awaited first flight of SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket in January 2018 will carry Musk’s own Tesla Roadster as its payload.

Mars is the mission’s destination, though it won’t actually be touching down on the Red Plant. It will instead be going into a billion year orbit around our planetary neighbor.

Oh, and Musk revealed his car will be looping David Bowie’s “Space Oddity” throughout the journey. It’s a fitting anthem to this monumental mission, though presumably he is saving “Life on Mars” for when SpaceX starts building Musk’s planned Martian’s settlement.

Payload will be my midnight cherry Tesla Roadster playing Space Oddity. Destination is Mars orbit. Will be in deep space for a billion years or so if it doesn’t blow up on ascent. — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) December 2, 2017

All of this was tweeted out by Musk on December 1. But the tech mogul is known to have some prolific Twitter fingers, leading observers wondering if this was nothing more than a joke.

After all, the Falcon Heavy’s launch has been pushed back at least five years, so it would be understandable if SpaceX carried out the mission in as straightforward and low-key a way as possible. But in classic Musk fashion, he has decided to go with the flashier approach.

Any doubts that Musk wouldn’t be rocketing his Roadster into outer space were quelled Friday. He posted pictures on Instagram of his electric car situated between rocket fairings, which are the blast shields found at the tip of the rocket that are used to protect payloads.

Regardless of what’s inside the Falcon Heavy, a successful launch would break records in the aerospace sector. Its 27 Merlin engines are capable of generating 5.1 million pounds of thrust at full power, according to a Spaceflight Now report. This would make it the most powerful currently operational rocket in the world.

SpaceX also plans to be able to recover the rocket cores used for this launch, allowing them to continue using this rocket for future space missions to the moon and Mars.

Hopefully they’ll send more than a Roadster next time.

GeneReddit123 on December 25th, 2017 at 19:20 UTC »

What does a "billion year orbit" mean?

MaritimeRedditor on December 25th, 2017 at 19:01 UTC »

Imagine if you were watching The Martian and Matt Damons character stumbled on an abondened car and he was able to get in and drive it around.

Think what the critics would say!

Well, consider that plothole filled.

bad_motivator on December 25th, 2017 at 18:49 UTC »

Holy fuck people, are we not allowed to have a little fun anymore? Do we need to be all business, all the time? It's his rocket company, he can launch what the fuck he wants. Would it make you miserable pricks happy if he just launched a hunk of lead for a mass simulator like everyone else when they test a new rocket?