Send your face to space!

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SlyPokerDog

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NASA wants to put your face in space. No, really: Just in time for the last two space shuttle flights, NASA is offering to fly pictures of anyone who uploads a head shot on their Face in Space website to the International Space Station.

Face in Space follows a long tradition of spacecraft carrying personal touches out of Earth’s gravity well. Since 1997, shuttle missions have carried elementary school students’ signatures as part of an outreach project called Student Signatures in Space. The Cassini spacecraft brought a disk of signatures into orbit around Saturn. The Phoenix Mars Lander took DVD to Mars’ north pole. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter took a microchip to the moon. And the exoplanet-hunting Kepler telescope took a DVD full of names and messages to ET into orbit.

The Voyager I spacecraft’s cargo was even more intimate: It carried a phonograph record containing recordings of a kiss, a mother’s first words to her child and Carl Sagan’s wife Ann Druyan’s brainwaves, among other Earthly sounds.

But this is the first time the public has been invited to send their portrait into orbit. As long as you’re older than 13, all you have to do is upload a photo (or, if you’re camera shy, just enter your name) and choose which of the last two Space Shuttle missions you’d like to fly on. STS-133 will launch the Space Shuttle Discovery on September 16, and STS-134 will launch Endeavour in November. After the Shuttle returns, you can print out a “flight certificate” signed by the mission commander. (You can also follow the STS-134 commander on Twitter @ShuttleCDRKelly.)

In the meantime, check out this other bit of NASA promo hilarity: Space Your Face, where an animated astronaut with whatever picture you want in its helmet boogies on the moon or Mars. Educational? Iffy. Entertaining? Oh yes.

Read More http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/06/face-in-space/#ixzz0qD2hHDcy
 
Wow, this is waay better than having a star named after me!! :clap:
 
Info from NASA and the direct link,

Fly Your Face in Space

NASA wants to put a picture of you on one of the two remaining space shuttle missions and launch it into orbit. To launch your face into space and become a part of history, just follow these steps:

First...Select the Participate button at the bottom of this page and upload your image/name, which will be flown aboard the space shuttle. Don't have a picture to upload? No problem, just skip the image upload and we will fly your name only on your selected mission!

Next...Print and save the confirmation page with your flight information.

Later...Return to this site after the landing to print your Flight Certificate - a commemorative certificate signed by the Mission Commander. You can also check on mission status, view mission photographs, link to various NASA educational resources and follow the commander and crew on Twitter or Facebook.


http://faceinspace.nasa.gov/index.aspx
 
done...sweet, those aliens are gonna freak out when they see me!
 
Can we send HCP's face instead?
 
So they're carrying a flash drive into space with a bunch of photos on it, and this is a big deal how?

I'd like to see a genetic comparison of the people who do this, and the people who bought Pet Rocks. I bet there's quite a bit of overlap in that Venn Diagram, lol...
 
This is typical. For example, in just the last flight that ended a week ago, the shuttle carried a CD with thousands of names on it. They're not going to take up your portrait in a wooden frame. They will take up one tiny CD with all the pictures and bring it back. Woop de doo.

Slightly more interesting is to ask a question to an astronaut who is in space. Years ago I communicated with one on the space station and got a quick answer. But I just went to the site and discovered that questions have been discontinued.

http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/feedback/expert/answer/isscrew/bowersox.html
 
This is typical. For example, in just the last flight that ended a week ago, the shuttle carried a CD with thousands of names on it. They're not going to take up your portrait in a wooden frame. They will take up one tiny CD with all the pictures and bring it back. Woop de doo.

Slightly more interesting is to ask a question to an astronaut who is in space. Years ago I communicated with one on the space station and got a quick answer. But I just went to the site and discovered that questions have been discontinued.

http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/feedback/expert/answer/isscrew/bowersox.html

Why?

Oh, sorry.
 

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