SpaceX Starman Cosmic Journey: LIVE Ambient Music Mix

submitted by levisabin on 05/26/18 1

Enjoy the mesmerizing views of Earth from Starman's Tesla as it journeys deeper into the great void, while your consciousness drifts away on hypnotic waves of ambient music. To answer some common questions: 1) This footage originally aired on February 6, 2018. 2) SpaceX is no longer receiving transmissions from Starman. 3) Starman is in a heliocentric orbit - around the Sun - that will take it past the orbit of Mars (by a few million km), but not as far as the asteroid belt. It is expected to continue orbiting for millions of years, until its orbit is eventually tweaked by the gravitational pull of the planets enough that it either collides with Earth, Venus, or the Sun. 4) Starman is currently more than 32 million miles from Earth. To track his position, visit whereisroadster.com. 5) SpaceX launched a car into space because they needed a "mass simulator" aboard this test launch of their new Falcon Heavy rocket. Elon Musk wanted to use something more interesting and memorable than concrete blocks or steel. 6) The continent you see as Starman drifts away from the Earth is Australia. 7) You don't see any stars because they are too dim in relation to the brightness of the direct sunlight. Camera sensors and film do not work the same way your eyes do; they can only be exposed properly for a specific level of brightness at any given time. If the camera's light sensitivity were adjusted to show the stars, then Starman, the Tesla, and Earth would appear as bright white blobs. 8) You don't see any cloud movement because the clouds are thousands of miles away from the camera. The clouds would need to be moving at more than 650 mph (roughly the speed of sound) in order for this footage to show just 1 pixel of cloud movement during the time it takes for the Earth to traverse the frame. 9) You don't see the Earth's rotation for the same reason. The Earth takes roughly 24 hours to rotate, yet it crosses the video frame in less than a minute. That's not enough time to notice any rotation. 10) During dark segments when the camera is adjusted for very low light, the frequent pixel flashes in the video are caused by particles of radiation from the Van Allen Belts striking the camera sensor. 11) The apparent dust that is sometimes visible on the Tesla's hood may be particles of rocket fuel, exhaust, or frozen condensed water vapor (frost). All of the material came from the vehicle, not from space. 12) The bits of white material that you see occasionally floating past are also just rocket fuel, exhaust, water, dust, or paint flecks from the rocket. Everything you see that's moving [that isn't the Earth or Moon] came from the rocket, not from space. 13) The occasional "poofs" of white cloud that flash momentarily behind the Tesla are just gases from the rocket engine escaping. 14) The trajectory looks "chaotic" because the vehicle was put in a slow spin, partly so that we can see these amazing Earth views. The vehicle is traveling an almost-straight path (its elliptical orbit is larger than that of the Earth). If you strap a GoPro to a football and throw it, the footage will look chaotic, even though the trajectory of the football is smooth. 15) The small round crescent Moon shaped object that sometimes drifts across the frame is, in fact, the Moon. Not a UFO. It looks small because of the wide angle camera lens being used. Try taking an un-zoomed photo of the Moon with your cell phone. It will look very small. 16) The huge blue object is the Earth. Also not a UFO.

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