Washington: A US-based space-funding company has launched a new project that will allow you to send messages and pictures to Mars.
The company Uwingu in Boulder, Colorado has launched its "Beam Me to Mars" project, inviting people to contribute, for a fee, to a "digital shout-out" that will send messages from Earth to the Red planet.
Uwingu and its transmission partner, communications provider Universal Space Network, will use radio telescopes to beam the messages on November 28 at the rate of 1 million bits per second.
The transmission, travelling at the speed of light, will reach the Red planet on that day in just 15 minutes, company representatives said.
For comparison, it took the first successful Mars mission, NASA's Mariner 4, launched on November 28, 1964 more than seven months to get to the Red planet.
"Beam Me to Mars" celebrates Mariner 4's landmark effort in a new and original way, the company said.
The messages won't be read or recorded by anyone on Mars but they'll be archived here on Earth, and participants will receive a commemorative certificate.
"We want it to inspire people," said Uwingu CEO Alan Stern, a planetary scientist and former NASA science chief.
"There has never been an opportunity before for people of Earth to shout out across the solar system their hopes and wishes for space exploration, for the future of mankind - for any of that," Stern told Space.com.
You can beam your name - or someone else's - to the Red Planet for USD 4.95. For USD 9.95, you can contribute a name and a 100-character message, while USD 19.95 gets you a 1,000-character note.
You can also shell out USD 99 to send a name, a long message and an image of your choice.
The company Uwingu in Boulder, Colorado has launched its "Beam Me to Mars" project, inviting people to contribute, for a fee, to a "digital shout-out" that will send messages from Earth to the Red planet.
Uwingu and its transmission partner, communications provider Universal Space Network, will use radio telescopes to beam the messages on November 28 at the rate of 1 million bits per second.
For comparison, it took the first successful Mars mission, NASA's Mariner 4, launched on November 28, 1964 more than seven months to get to the Red planet.
Advertisement
The messages won't be read or recorded by anyone on Mars but they'll be archived here on Earth, and participants will receive a commemorative certificate.
Advertisement
"There has never been an opportunity before for people of Earth to shout out across the solar system their hopes and wishes for space exploration, for the future of mankind - for any of that," Stern told Space.com.
Advertisement
You can also shell out USD 99 to send a name, a long message and an image of your choice.
COMMENTS
Advertisement
One8 Commune's New Outlet In Mohali Promises An Unforgettable Culinary Experience Was Not Consulted: BJP Leader Kirit Somaiya Declines Party Appointment For Maharashtra Polls SpaceX Starship Mars Mission Begins in 2026 with Uncrewed Flights, Elon Musk Reveals In Big Step Towards Simultaneous Polls, Cabinet Clears 1 Nation, 1 Election On Camera, Doctor Thrashed For Asking Patient's Family To Remove Slippers Explained: How Pagers Turned Bombs And Why Israel Is Being Blamed Centre's New Programme Lets You Clear Immigration At Airports In Seconds Worst Drought On Record Lowers Amazon Rivers To All-Time Lows Application Status For Multi-Tasking Staff, Havaldar Exam 2024 Released Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.