The newly discovered asteroid Tesla Roadster has been shown to be launched in space
Elona male The sense of humor is not in this world.
Seven years after the SpaceX CEO launched Tesla Roadster in Orbit, astronomers from The Harvard-Smithsonian Astrophysics Center at the Massachusetts Astrophysics Center in the Harvard-Smithsonian Center has been confused with an asteroid earlier this month.
The day after the astronomers from the Small Planet Center registered 2018 CN41, it was deleted on January 3 when they found that it was actually a men’s roadster.
The center has announced on its website that the 2018 CN41 register has been deleted after “pointed out that the orbit corresponds to the artificial object, 2018-017A, Falcon Heavy Upper Stage with Tesla Roadster. The 2018 CN41 mark is deleted and will be listed as omitted.”
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Spacex launched Tesla Roadster on the first flight of Spacex’s huge rocket Falcon Heavy in February 2018.
The Roadster was expected to go to an elliptical orbit around the sun, going a little further away from Mars and back to the ground, but obviously exceeded the Mars orbit and stayed goes toward the asteroid beltsaid then Musk.
When the Roadster was mistakenly replaced by asteroid earlier this month, it was less than 150,000 miles away from the country, which is closer than the moon orbit, according to Astronomy magazines, which means that astronomers would like to follow how much it is approaching Earth.
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Astrophysic Center for Astrophysics (CFA) Jonathan McDowell told Astronomy magazine that the error shows problems with facilities that are not accompanied.
“In the worst case, you spend a billion on launching space probe to study asteroids and realize that it’s not an asteroid only when you get there,” he said.
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