Queen's Brian May Releases 'New Horizons' Single to Celebrate Epic Flyby
New Horizons'
flyby of the distant object Ultima Thule now has its own soundtrack.
Astrophysicist Brian May, lead guitarist for the band Queen, released a new single called "New Horizons" just after midnight EST (0500 GMT) on New Year's Day to highlight the flyby, which peaked about 30 minutes later when the NASA spacecraft zoomed within 2,200 miles (3,500 kilometers) of
Ultima Thule.
Ultima lies about 4 billion miles (6.4 billion km) from Earth and is now the farthest-flung celestial body ever to be visited by a spacecraft. [
New Horizons at Ultima Thule: Full Coverage]
"This project made music in my head, and that's what you're hearing," May told reporters on Monday (Dec. 31).
"This mission is about human curiosity," he added. "It's about the need of humankind to go out and explore."
A brand-new single
After its famous
flyby of Pluto in July 2015, New Horizons began an extended mission to visit another object in the Kuiper Belt, a band of icy rocks beyond Neptune's orbit. That second target is officially known as 2014 MU69, and has been nicknamed Ultima Thule by the mission team.
In visiting one of the most primitive and pristine objects in the solar system's dark outer reaches, New Horizons is probing the building blocks of planets, and the solar system's earliest history.
The 22-mile-wide (35 km) Ultima Thule is the first small
Kuiper Belt object ever visited. This makes the encounter incredibly intriguing, because "there is nothing more exciting in a world of exploration than going to a place about which you know nothing," May said. "The sky's the limit for what we could find out."
According to May,
New Horizons principal investigator Alan Stern, a planetary scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Colorado, called him up to request he write a song for the mission. May said he initially had some reservations.
"I thought this was going to be hard, because I can't think of anything that rhymes with Ultima Thule," he said.
May said that, as he considered the mission's goals, he began to hear in his head "the music of an object plummeting through space faster than anything before." He realized that, rather than trying to focus on the specifics of the mission itself, he should instead work to incorporate the spirit of exploration embodied by the spacecraft.
May sat down with English lyricist Don Black, who penned iconic songs such as "Born Free," which May described as "a very forward-looking song." The next morning, May woke up with what he described as two simple verses in his inbox from Black — verses that inspired him and kicked him into action.
Tucked into the new single are quotes from the late cosmologist
Stephen Hawking. The song both begins and concludes with those quotes, while a third is tucked in the middle.
May played his new single just after midnight on New Year's Day, when it became
available on iTunes and various streaming platforms. A YouTube video that May said he and his colleagues made on a "shoestring budget" will also be available, and will also tell the story of the mission team.
"This became a song which is an anthem to human endeavor," May said. "The human race explores because it needs to know."
https://www.space.com/42875-brian-may-new-horizons-song-ultima-thule-flyby.html