Cape Canaveral, Florida – The “Blue Danube” Strauss is heading to space this month to celebrate the centenary of The birth of the King of the Pallis.
It will be the classic piece I smiled in the universe It is also performed by the siphonian Vienna orchestra. The heavenly transmission will be celebrated on May 31-with free public examinations in Vienna, Madrid and New York- European Space Agency Establishing 50 years ago.
Although music can be converted into radio signals in actual time, according to officials, the European Space Agency will issue a previously recorded copy of the orchestra rehearsal the day before to avoid any technical problems. Direct performance will provide accompanying.
You will get rid of radio signals at light at light, or 670 million miles per hour (more than a billion kilometers per hour).
This will put music in the moon in 1 half a second, after Mars in 4 minutes and a half, and after Jupiter in 37 minutes and after Neptune in four hours. Within 23 hours, signals will be far from Earth like Voyageer 1 in NASA, which is the most distant spacecraft in the world more than 15 billion miles (24 billion km) in space between stars.
NASA also celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of its founding in 2008 by transferring a song directly to Deep Space: The Beatles “across the universe. Last year, NASA has played “The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly)” towards Venus.
Music has flowed from another planet to Earth – with the permission of NASA Mars Rover. California’s jetting control units in California sent a registration to Will.i.am “Eve of Stars” to curiosity in 2012 and moved them back.
These are all operations in deep space, unlike broadcasting between melodies that flow between the NASA control and orbits mission since the mid -sixties.
Now it is the role of Strauss, after it moved to Voyager’s golden records almost half a century ago.
It was launched in 1977, both NASA 1 and 2 Voyageers carry gold -plated fonogra, along with a pen and operate instructions for anyone or anything there.
Records contain sounds and pictures of the ground as well as 90 minutes of music. The late astronomer Karl Sagan led the committee that chose to cut Bach, Beethoven, Mozart and Ruvinski, as well as modern and serial choices.
Among those who skipped Johann Strauss II, who was the “Blue Danube” extending to OPUS Sci-Fi for 1968 “2001: A Space Odyssey”.
The Vienna Tourism Council, where Strauss was born on October 25, 1825, said that it aims to correct the “cosmic error” by sending the “most famous of the Palls” to its next home between the stars.
The large radio antenna of ESA in Spain, which is part of the space agency’s deep space network, will achieve decorations. The dish will be directed in the direction of Voyageer 1, so “Blue Danube” is heading in this way.
“Music has all binds us through time and place in a very special way,” Esa, Joseph Ashbakir, said in a statement. “The European Space Agency is pleased to share the theater with Johann Strauss II and opens the imagination of future space scientists and explorers who may one day walk into space anthem.”