
SpaceX Launches Dog's Ashes To Space On Memorial Flight
A dog's ashes were among the remains sent into space this weekend as part of a memorial mission honouring loved ones by carrying them beyond Earth's atmosphere.
Franz, a beloved family Labrador, was among 166 small capsules launched aboard the inaugural Perseverance SpaceX Flight by Texas-based Celestis Inc. The mission lifted off Sunday around 5:30 pm from Vandenberg Space Force Base in Santa Barbara, California.
Franz died aged 13 in October 2020. "He was the best dog, just so soft and nice and loved hugs," said the dog's owner Harvin Moore.
The pet was more like a sibling to Mr Moore's children, Elizabeth and Quinn. "Now we can't wait to watch our good boy go galactic," he told The NY Post ahead of the launch.
The flight lasted about three hours, during which the capsules orbited Earth twice. The rocket then re-entered the atmosphere and splashed down in the Pacific Ocean somewhere between Alaska and Hawaii.
A recovery ship, stationed at sea ahead of time, tracked and retrieved the capsules before sending them to Germany for processing. Within two months, the remains will be returned to their families.
The cost to send each capsule into space was $3,500 (over Rs 3 lakh). For Franz's owner, the expense was "a lot more" than the dog's value, but entirely worth it for his family of space enthusiasts.
Mr Moore said, "The emotional power of being with a group of people who are celebrating the life of a loved one in this way ... it's amazing. It's nothing we'll ever forget. It's just pure joy."
Houston-based Celestis has a long history of sending DNA and cremated remains of people, pets, and celebrities into space using rockets like United Launch Alliance's Vulcan Centaur.
Their missions have carried iconic figures such as "Star Trek" legends Nichelle Nichols, DeForest Kelley, Gene Roddenberry and his wife Majel Barrett Roddenberry, and James "Scotty" Doohan. They also flew Douglas Trumbull, a visual effects pioneer behind 2001: A Space Odyssey and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, along with symbolic remains of four former US presidents, George Washington, Dwight D Eisenhower, John F Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan, on last year's deep-space Enterprise Flight.
Each capsule, crafted from titanium or aluminium and measuring roughly a quarter to half an inch, contained either DNA or cremated remains. These precious capsules orbited Earth twice aboard a 23-foot-tall SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, travelling at a speed of almost 28,000 kmph in low Earth orbit.
Charles Chafer, Celestis CEO and co-founder said Saturday, "Many people whose ashes and DNA are flying are people that always wanted to go to space in their lifetime but were never able to do that. It also helps families move from feelings of grief to joy."
Also aboard the Perseverance Flight were the ashes of Wesley Dreyer, an aerospace engineer involved in investigating the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster, as well as the DNA of a living three-year-old boy in Germany.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
10 hours ago
- Time of India
Analemma Tower: Skyscraper that hangs in space with an asteroid?
Imagine a building that doesn't rise from the ground, but descends from the sky. That's the concept behind the Analemma Tower, a futuristic architectural vision by New York-based firm Clouds Architecture Office (Clouds AO). Instead of being built from the Earth up, the structure would hang from an asteroid placed in geosynchronous orbit around 50,000 kilometres above the Earth's surface. Following a daily figure-eight path over the globe, the tower would pass above cities like New York, Dubai, and Panama City. While it remains a speculative idea, the Analemma Tower challenges long-held ideas of construction, mobility, and the future of urban living. The skyscraper that hangs from space Traditional skyscrapers begin at the ground and reach upward, constrained by gravity and structural limits. The Analemma Tower turns this idea on its head. It envisions a building suspended from space using a system called the Universal Orbital Support System (UOSS). Instead of digging deeper foundations, the structure would hang from a cable tethered to an asteroid in orbit — essentially replacing the foundation with space itself. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like She Took 1 Teaspoon Before Bed – Her Belly Was Gone in a Week Hollywood News | USA Click Here Undo A building that orbits: how the tower moves across the Earth The tower would not be stationary. Its asteroid anchor would orbit the Earth in a way that traces a figure-eight pattern, also known as an "analemma." As a result, the tower would move over different parts of the planet throughout the day but return to the same position every 24 hours. This would allow residents or visitors to experience a constantly changing view, with potential access points as the lower part of the tower passes over select cities. Living in the sky: design, power, and life at 50,000km up Inside the Analemma Tower, lower floors — closer to the ground — would contain residential spaces, offices, and shopping areas, while upper levels could be used for research, tourism, or spiritual retreats. Electromagnetic elevators would replace traditional cable systems to allow movement between sections of the tower. Energy would be supplied by space-based solar panels, while closed-loop systems would recycle water and air, similar to those used on the International Space Station (ISS). The tower is imagined as a hybrid between a city and a spacecraft. Between vision and reality: the science that holds it back Despite the detail in design, the Analemma Tower remains a theoretical concept. Capturing and relocating an asteroid into stable orbit is well beyond current space capabilities. Even if such a feat were possible, materials strong enough to suspend such a massive structure from space do not yet exist. In addition, human life at high altitudes would require intense protection from radiation, low pressure, and extreme temperatures. These factors make the project unrealistic with today's technology. Why dream it? reimagining the future of cities and space living While the idea may not be physically achievable now, it serves a powerful purpose: expanding the limits of architectural thinking. The Analemma Tower encourages scientists, engineers, and designers to consider what urban life might look like in the distant future — perhaps even beyond Earth. As cities face increasing pressure from population growth and land scarcity, such concepts spark valuable dialogue about sustainability, mobility, and off-world living. Analemma Tower: A floating symbol of tomorrow's possibilities Though unlikely to be built in near future, the Analemma Tower stands as a symbol of ambition and imagination. It invites us to think beyond gravity and land, to explore new ways of inhabiting space and redefining the built environment. As history has shown with skyscrapers, airplanes, and satellites, today's impossibilities often become tomorrow's realities — and Analemma is one such dream suspended in potential.


Indian Express
12 hours ago
- Indian Express
PM speaks to Shubhanshu Shukla, the 1st Indian to reach International Space Station
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday spoke with Shubhanshu Shukla, the Indian astronaut currently aboard the International Space Station (ISS) as part of the Axiom-4 mission. Shukla made history on Wednesday as he launched into orbit as part of the Axiom-4 mission, a private commercial spaceflight operated by US-based Axiom Space. PM @narendramodi interacted with Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla, who is aboard the International Space Station. — PMO India (@PMOIndia) June 28, 2025 Shukla, accompanied by three other international astronauts, jetted off to the ISS on board SpaceX's Dragon capsule from NASA's Kennedy Space Centre, as part of the Axiom-4 mission, on June 25. This mission marks the first time an Indian astronaut has been to space since Rakesh Sharma's legendary flight aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft in 1984. During the interaction, PM Modi lauded Shukla's achievement, calling it a proud moment for the entire nation and a stepping stone towards India's Gaganyaan mission.


Indian Express
15 hours ago
- Indian Express
Admissions to 20 PG courses in IP University through CUET scores
The Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University (GGSIPU) Delhi will offer admissions to 20 postgraduate programmes through the Common University Entrance Test Postgraduate (CUET PG) scores for the academic session 2025-26. The 20 postgrauduate programmes include MBA, MCA (software engineering) or MCA, MAMC, MPT (M/N/S/C), MSc (environment management), LLM, MA (English), MEd, MTech (CSG), MTech (EG), MA (economics), PG in applied geoinformatics, MSc (yoga), MSc (medicinal chemistry and drug design), MSc (bioinformatics), MSc (molecular diagnostics), MSc (microbiology), MS (packaging technology), BEd and BEd (special education). Candidates interested in admissions to these programmes through CUET scores can apply online by July 15 with a fee of Rs 2,500 for application and counselling. Detailed information is available on the university's websites – and CUET PG scores will be used for admission to PG programmes after the merit list of national-level tests or GGSIPU Common Entrance Test (CET) and university-conducted entrance exams for affiliated programmes is exhausted. IPU, this year, has introduced an orphan children quota, in addition to the existing Single Girl Child quota introduced last year. The quota will be effective from the academic session 2025-26. Under this quota, one additional seat will be reserved in each university schools and programmes, and the selected students will be eligible for a 100 per cent fee waiver under the university's EWS scheme. The University has launched an admission chatbot service. The IP University admission chatbot service seeks to provide instant answers to queries related to admissions in various programmes for the new session. The link to the new service is available on the University's main website — Using this service, prospective applicants can get immediate answers to their queries related to admissions in various programmes for the new session, a statement issued by the university said. IPU, this year, is offering 46 master's degree programmes, 40 PhD programmes, and 34 undergraduate degree programmes for over 40,000 seats.