The author of the novel '2001: A Space Odyssey' died in 2008 in Sri Lanka, and now NASA scientists have announced plans to send his DNA into orbit around the Sun in 2014 aboard the Sunjammer, a solar-powered spacecraft which gets its name from the writings of Clarke.
Called the Sunjammer Cosmic Archive (SCA), the flying time capsule is a first in the history of space travel, carrying digital files of human DNA including Clarke's aboard the sun-powered space ship, FoxNews.Com reported.
"Clarke certainly imagined himself going to space someday, and that day is finally arriving," said Stephen Eisele, vice president of Space Services, Inc, a NASA contractor on the project.
NASA's mission manager Ron Unger, at the Marshall Space Flight Center, described the Sunjammer project, as a 'game changing technology' that could alter mankind's approach to space travel.
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It seems like something out of Clarke's sci-fi writings, which is one reason that his DNA, which he left to science upon his death, is the payload for the mission, Eisele said.
This NASA-funded technology demonstration is designed to highlight the efficacy of solar sails for space propulsion applications; it's now being built by Sunjammer team leader L'Garde, Inc, based in Tustin, California.
"Sunjammer will morph - much like a butterfly - into a Space Shuttle-sized ship capable of manoeuvring solely by riding the photonic pressure of the Sun," Nathan Barnes, president of L'Garde, told the website.
The diminutive spacecraft will be carried as a secondary spacecraft aboard a Falcon rocket 1,499,908 kilometres from Earth, where it will be released into space.