Monday, January 7, 2019

Legendary Rock Star Brian May of Queen Lends Luster to NASA New Horizons with Rocking Music Video and 3D Creations: Video/Photos


Video Caption: Brian May - New Horizons (Ultima Thule Mix) [Official Music Video]. Celebrating the whole 13-year Journey of New Horizons probe. This is Brian’s personal tribute to the on-going NASA New Horizons mission, which on New Years Day 2019 achieved the most distant spacecraft flyby in history at Ultima Thule.  Credit: Brian May

Ken Kremer  --SpaceUpClose.com & RocketSTEM –6 January 2019

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERISTY APPLIED PHYSICS LABORATORY, LAUREL, MD –  Legendary rock star Dr. Brian May, lead guitarist for the world famous rock band Queen who is also an official member of the New Horizons science team, lent his considerable luster to the groundbreaking NASA mission by composing a new song and rocking music video in tribute to the mission "and the need for mankind to explore" - coinciding with the fast flyby of ‘Ultima Thule’ a miniscule far flung rock dating to the dawn of our solar system.  The timely tune is named simply ‘New Horizons.’  It was released worldwide online at the stroke of midnight 2019 –  but first to the team live by May himself personally present at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory!

May - a Ph.D. astrophysicist - created the music video and wrote the song especially for the New Years Day 2019 flyby of Ultima Thule - the farthest object ever visited - by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft at the request of Principal Investigator Dr. Alan Stern. 

"This mission is about human curiosity," May said at a media briefing at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU APL), in Laurel, MD just hours before the Jan. 1 flyby. "Its about the need for mankind to explore and see and discover what makes the universe tick. So my song is an anthem about the human spirit and endeavoring to discover the universe." 

Enjoy the Brian May video above.
Celebrating New Horizons mission New Year’s Day 2019 flyby of Ultima Thule, Dr. Brian May, Queen lead guitarist and team member, speaks to the media about his role in the mission and debut of his new song 'New Horizons' dedicated to the mission at JHU APL urging 'the need for mankind to explore space' as the spacecraft explores the furthest/coldest object ever visited by human emissary.  Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/spaceupclose.com

Celebrating New Horizons mission New Year’s Day 2019 flyby of Ultima Thule team member Dr. Brian May (Queen lead guitarist) debuts his new astronomically awesome song 'New Horizons' at JHU APL urging 'the need for mankind to explore space' as the spacecraft explores the furthest/coldest object ever visited by human emissary. Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/spaceupclose.com
May premiered the astronomically awesome song especially during the New Years midnight Monday night countdown celebration with his personal exuberant commentary in front of hundreds of team members, guests and media gathered at JHU APL leading up to the 12:33 a.m. EST flyby of Ultima Thule. 

Ultima Thule is the most distant and most primitive object ever explored up close by an emissary from humanity – a small icy rock in the Kuiper Belt located some 1 Billion miles (1.6 Billion km) beyond Pluto and orbits 4.1 Billion miles (6.6 Billion km) from the Sun and the Earth.

It was discovered to be a ‘contact binary’ and counts as the first planetesimal ever visited and sort of like traveling in a time machine to the birth of our solar system.

“Alan [Stern] called me about five months ago and said ‘Can you make some music for the Ultima Thule flyby?” May explained at the Dec. 31 pre-flyby briefing.


“And I thought this is probably going to be hard because I can’t think of anything that rhymes with ‘Ultima Thule’,” he joked to laughter.

“So I had a doubt in my mind but then it went away and I could hear some music playing in my mind, of an object plummeting through space faster than anything ever launched away from Earth – and I got kind of inspired!”

“But I didn’t have a lyric. And then it gradually dawned on me.”
“This mission is about human curiosity.  It’s about the need for mankind to explore and discover what makes the universe tick. And this has been going on since the dawn of time.”

“So my song is an anthem about the human spirit and endeavoring to discover the universe!" May explained.

May’s friend Don Black, songwriter of the iconic tune “Born Free” about nature was inspired as well and offered May two very simple verses as ideas for the song.

“New Horizons to explore” & “New Horizons that we’ve never seen before!”

That evolved into the song that May and Black eventually wrote. 

"The song is an anthem to human endeavor.”

The flyby countdown event was attended by hundreds of New Horizons team members, invited guests and the media including Space UpClose at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU APL), in Laurel, MD.

Enjoy my photos. 

Celebrating New Horizons mission New Year’s Day 2019 flyby of Ultima Thule team member Dr. Brian May (Queen lead guitarist) debuts his new astronomically awesome song 'New Horizons' at JHU APL urging 'the need for mankind to explore space' as the spacecraft explores the furthest/coldest object ever visited by human emissary.  Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/spaceupclose.com

May and Stern hugged and gave two big thumbs up at the conclusion of the music video premier at JHU APL.

Celebrating New Horizons mission New Year’s Day 2019 flyby of Ultima Thule: PI Dr. Alan Stern & team member Dr. Brian May (Queen lead guitarist) give two thumbs up debuting his new astronomically awesome song 'New Horizons' at JHU APL urging 'the need for mankind to explore space' as the spacecraft explores the furthest/coldest object ever visited by human emissary.  Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/spaceupclose.com
Personally I thought the pulse pounding music rocked and the imaginative and accurately detailed video vividly illustrated the entire mission in a most wonderful way– starting with the launch on a ULA Atlas V in 2006 amplified by the striking voice of famed astronomer Steven Hawking and then voyaging outwards for earlier flybys past Jupiter and Pluto and concluding with the Ultima Thule encounter.

“The revelations of New Horizons may help us better understand how our solar system was formed!” says Hawking in his synthesized voice near the beginning of  the video.

To date its gotten about 1 million views !!!

The Atlas V launched New Horizons as the ‘Fastest Spaceship ever into the Unknown’  … and ‘The First Mission to the Last Planet!’ 


May received his doctorate in astrophysics from Imperial College London in 2007. The topic was zodiacal dust. 

Dr. Brain May also plays a science role in the New Horizons mission as a team member working on the 3 D images of Ultima Thule. He created a left and right stereo image pair based on these initial two LORRI images - see below.
Dr. Brain May, Queen lead guitarist and New Horizons team member and Dr. Ken Kremer discuss 3D imaging of the planets and Ultima Thule holding his 3D glasses – at JHU APL pre-flyby media briefing Dec. 31, 2019. Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/spaceupclose.com
“The Prize !! For those of us who waited with bated breath for the Ultimate Stereo of Ultima Thule ...,” Brian May wrote on his social media pages. 
Celebrating New Horizons mission New Year’s Day 2019 flyby of Ultima Thule, Dr. Brian May, Queen lead guitarist and team member, speaks to the media about his role in the mission and debut of his new song 'New Horizons' dedicated to the mission at JHU APL urging 'the need for mankind to explore space' as the spacecraft explores the furthest/coldest object ever visited by human emissary.  Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/spaceupclose.com
I spoke with Brain May at a pre-flyby JHU APL briefing about how using 3D imagery greatly helps increase public awareness and support for space exploration and science. 
Dr. Brain May, Queen lead guitarist and New Horizons team member and Dr. Ken Kremer discuss 3D imaging of the planets and Ultima Thule holding his 3D glasses – at JHU APL pre-flyby media briefing Dec. 31, 2019. Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/spaceupclose.com
The baby grand piano shaped New Horizons spacecraft flew past Ultima Thule within a distance of merely 2,200 miles (3,500 kilometers) while approaching at a velocity of 32,000 mph (9 miles per second).  

It gathered about 50 GB of data including imagery, spectroscopy and research measurements using its 7 on board science instruments.

“Ultima Thule” is an unchanged fossil remnant and planetesimal formed during the dawn of our solar system some 4.5 Billion Years ago.

Planetesimals are the tiny building blocks from which much larger structures like moons and planets are born by accretion of hordes of bits of matter over time.    

The bi-lobal rock is shaped remarkably like a ‘snowman’ and consists of two connected balls roughly spherical in appearance. 

The new world measures 19 miles (31 kilometers) in length. The team has unofficially nicknamed the larger sphere "Ultima" (12 miles/19 kilometers across) and the smaller sphere "Thule" (9 miles/14 kilometers across).

This image taken by the Long-Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) is the most detailed of Ultima Thule returned so far by NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft. It was taken at 5:01 Universal Time on January 1, 2019, just 30 minutes before closest approach from a range of 18,000 miles (28,000 kilometers), with an original scale of 459 feet (140 meters) per pixel. The science team unveiled this image at the Jan 2, media briefing at JHU APL. Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/spaceupclose.com
Watch for Ken’s continuing onsite coverage direct from JHU APL.

Watch for Ken’s continuing onsite coverage of NASA, SpaceX, ULA, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and more space and mission reports direct from the Kennedy Space Center, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida and Wallops Flight Facility, Virginia.
Stay tuned here for Ken's continuing Earth and Planetary science and human spaceflight news: www.kenkremer.com –www.spaceupclose.com – twitter @ken_kremer – email: ken at kenkremer.com

Dr. Kremer is a research scientist, journalist and photographer based in the KSC area.

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Ken’s photos are for sale and he is available for lectures and outreach events


Dr. Brain May, Queen lead guitarist and New Horizons team member and Dr. Ken Kremer/Space Up Close shake hands over ‘the need for mankind to explore’ and   using 3D  imaging to raise public understand and support for space exploration – including Ultima Thule– at JHU APL pre-flyby media briefing Dec. 31, 2019. Credit: Steven Young/Astronomy Now

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