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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Beaming up Scotty ... and Gordo

Posted: Thursday, March 29, 2007 3:15 PM by Alan Boyle

Celebrities from TV's classic "Star Trek" and America's space program are due to take a posthumous trip to the final frontier – and back – on April 28, when an UP Aerospace suborbital rocket carries the cremated remains of "Star Trek" actor James "Scotty" Doohan, NASA astronaut Gordon "Gordo" Cooper and more than 200 others on a memorial spaceflight.

The flight - organized by Celestis Corp., a subsidiary of Houston-based Space Services Inc. - has been in the planning stage for more than a year. Here's how it works: Ashes from the dearly departed are placed in metal capsules about the size of lipstick tubes, then put aboard the rocket for launch from New Mexico's Spaceport America to an altitude of about 70 miles, just beyond the internationally accepted boundary of space. The payload then falls back to earth for recovery.

"We will take those capsules, and we'll mount them on beautiful plaques, and they will be a keepsake for the families," Susan Schonfeld, a spokeswoman for Space Services, told me today.

A memorial ceremony will be conducted on the eve of the flight at Alamogordo's New Mexico Museum of Space History, Schonfeld said.

Doohan and Cooper are the best-known names on the flight list:

  • Cooper orbited Earth 22 times during his Mercury 9 flight in 1963, becoming the last American to fly alone in space until SpaceShipOne's private-sector astronauts did it in 2004. Cooper was also the command pilot for Gemini 5 in 1965. He died in 2004 at the age of 77.
  • Doohan played Chief Engineer Montgomery Scott on the classic "Star Trek" TV show in the 1960s, and reprised that role in several "Trek" movies. His portrayal of "Scotty" was the highlight of a TV and film career that spanned more than 50 years. He died in 2005 at the age of 85.

Among those attending the launch will be Doohan's widow, Wende C. Doohan. "While 'Scotty' lived this, Jimmy lived for this," she said in a Space Services news release. "I will be there, to see the launch, knowing that Jimmy is participating in an industry which he loved so very much."

If this flight is successful, it would mark the first true space foray for Connecticut-based UP Aerospace. The venture's maiden launch ended in failure last September, but the company says it has resolved the aerodynamic problems that prevented the earlier Spaceloft XL rocket from getting up to space.

It would also mark the first real space mission for Spaceport America, which is seeking support from local taxpayers in an April 3 ballot. That vote could well determine how quickly the New Mexico spaceport moves ahead with its plans for a $198 million suborbital space tourism complex.

This week, the spaceport authority announced agreement on the terms of a future lease with billionaire Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic - and on Friday, the spaceport is planning a spacecraft integration ceremony for the UP Aerospace flight. All this activity seems aimed at raising the spaceport's visibility in advance of next week's vote.

"We're all breaking new ground," Rick Homans, chairman of the New Mexico Spaceport Authority and cabinet secretary for the New Mexico Economic Development Department, was quoted as saying in Space Services' release. "We're in this for the long term, developing new businesses and new technologies."

Celestis offers space-themed memorial packages ranging from $499 (for a suborbital-and-back flight) to $12,500 or more (for a one-way trip beyond Earth orbit).

“Space remains the domain of the few, the dream of many,” Charles Chafer, chief executive officer for Celestis and Space Services, said in the release. “With Celestis, the dream of spaceflight, and the desire to take part in the opening of the space frontier, can be realized - and is available to everyone."

Next month's flight won't necessarily mark the final trip to the final frontier for Doohan and Cooper: Samples of their ashes are also due to fly as part of Celestis' secondary payload aboard SpaceX's next Falcon 1 flight, Chafer told me last week. That launch is scheduled for September.

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Comments

Rest in peace, Scotty, Gordo. In your own ways, you helped us live a dream.
Mr. Boyle,

I must thank you for putting this blog together. I know, I know, this is a job and source of profit (somehow) for a corporation, so I understand it isn't meant as a public service or charitable effort. Nonetheless, it is so wonderful to have found access to a resource on all things cosmological, for free, that tends to hit so many interesting topics. My childhood passion for astronomy, chemistry, and biology never ended, I traded an engineering degree for a business career (believe me, nobody reading this wants me engineering anything...unless stories of downed airplanes and falling buildings are lovable). Thus my days are filled with non-science outside of what my company does.

So I go here. And I read postings about ice on Mars, string theory, and trips to inner space. I have no further time to get deeper...so this is a welcome diversion with just enough meat to satisfy my curiousity and open my eyes, but not so much that I lose interest because I'm out of study.

But I really want to thank you for the high profile, public access nature of the position of this blog on msnbc.com - it puts this sometimes odd material in a very public position, inviting the uninitiated to think "big and small".

And finally, I want to thank you for the occasional postings of amateur astronomy tools - if you could do more of that, I might be more prepared for next year, when I take my kids out to rural Kansas for the first time to look at the moon, planets and stars. So if an astronomy expert has some sound advice on the best (affordable...which is subjective I know) available tools and gadgets for seeing craters on the moon, keep 'em coming!
Godspeed Scotty and Gordo!! They were an inspiration to us all
Rest in peace Scotty and Gordo. You were an inspiration to the world.
El Gordo!  May your spirit enjoy the loft.  Thanks for everything.

Wild Bill
Amen to that ... I'm so glad Bill found this post as a way to pay tribute to Gordon Cooper. Jimmy Doohan, of course, deserves the tributes as well ... but in some quarters, Gordo hasn't been as much in the spotlight. I never knew him personally, but Gordon Cooper seems to have been among the most original characters in the early astronaut corps - a laid-back, cocky fighter jock who was something of a misfit when it came to authority, and a UFO spotter to boot. If Dennis Quaid's portrayal of him in "The Right Stuff" is anything close to reality (and Quaid met with Cooper while preparing for the role), Gordo was quite a guy. Godspeed to all those who took that "memorial spaceflight" today.
It was my pleasure to meet James Doohan in the 80s and think this is a fantastic way to appreciate and tribute the legacy.
It was an Honor to meet James Doohan at the world of weels at the St.Paul civic center in the 70s and once more later on in my life Scotty keep the EnterPrise running for 3 seasons and 7 movies Thank you James Doohan for the ride you gave us so sit back in Heaven and injoy the ride.
God speed to Gordo and James..They were American heroes and will always be remembered..They can rest in their own ship at this time
Godspeed Scotty and Gordon Cooper. Your flights in space and flights of fantasy have inspired generations. Many of us have lived our dream through you, so may you now rest in peace on your way to your next great adventure.
Scotty and Gordon....when I go to bed tonight I'll be thinking of you guys and what a great adventure, you made my life and my Dad's....Safe traveling to you!
As a lifelong devotee of Star Trek, I was saddened by the demise of James Doohan as well as Deforest Kelly and, of course, Gene Roddenberry.I will always remember Scotty with great affection being a fellow Scot myself. Rest in peace and when my time arrives, I hope he will respond when I ask him to "Beam me up" to his place in the heavens.


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