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'Starman' just zipped past Mars in his rapidly-decaying Tesla Roadster


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'Starman' just zipped past Mars in his rapidly-decaying Tesla Roadster

He probably doesn't look so pretty anymore.

 

Starman sent pictures home before leaving Earth orbit.

Starman sent pictures home before leaving Earth orbit.
(Image: © SpaceX)
 

Starman — the dummy riding a cherry-red Tesla Roadster through space — has made his closest approach ever to Mars.

 

That electric convertible with its mannequin passenger bolted to the top of a Falcon Heavy rocket as a stunt during the SpaceX rocket's first test

 

launch Feb, 6, 2018. (It's common for test launches to include heavy payloads, but they're usually more boring than cherry-red sportscars.) Two

 

years later, the Falcon Heavy upper stage and the vehicle at its tip are making their second trip around the sun. Jonathan McDowell, a Harvard

 

astrophysicist who tracks space objects as a side project, found that Starman passed 4.6 million miles (7.4 million kilometers) from Mars at 2:25 a.m.

 

EDT Oct. 7. That's about 19 times the distance from Earth to the moon, and 35 times closer than anyone on Earth has gotten to Mars.

 

(The closest recent approach between the two planets was 34.8 million miles (56 million km) in 2003, according to World Atlas, though the planets

 

are often hundreds of millions of miles apart.)

 

Image

 

 

No one can see the Falcon Heavy upper stage at its current distance. And the strange, beautiful images it once beamed home to Earth have long

 

since ceased. But orbits over periods of a few years are fairly straightforward to predict, and McDowell used data about how the rocket was moving

 

when it left Earth's gravity behind to pinpoint its recent movements.

 

The Roadster-bearing rocket stage is on an asymmetrical orbital course that takes it as far as 1.66 times Earth's distance from the sun at one end of

 

its trek — out beyond the orbit of Mars — and then back within Earth's orbit at the other end, 0.99 times Earth's distance from the sun.

 

 

I know many of you have an interest in the Falcon Heavy 001 second stage, which continues orbiting the Sun with a sports car bolted to its payload adapter.

Image

 

The stage has passed through the second aphelion of its 0.99 x 1.66 AU orbit and a couple of days ago passed back inside the orbit of Mars.

 

Image

 

Last time Starman circled the sun, McDowell said, it crossed Mars' orbit while the Red Planet was quite far away. But this time the crossing lined up

 

with a fairly close approach — though still not close enough to feel a strong tug of Martian gravity.

 

At this point, if you were to go look at the Roadster, it probably would look pretty different. As Live Science reported in 2018, the harsh solar

 

radiation environment between the planets would probably have wrecked all the exposed organic materials (red paint, rubber tires, leather seats and

 

the like), breaking the carbon bonds that hold them together. And without Earth's protective atmosphere and magnetic shielding, even the robust

 

plastics in the windshield and carbon fiber materials would start to disintegrate. Over the course of decades or centuries, the car should be reduced

 

to its aluminum frame and sturdiest glass parts — assuming none of them get destroyed in impacts with passing space rocks.

 

 

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