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Japan's Aerospace Exploration Agency to launch love satellites

News Nation Bureau | Edited By : Fayiq Wani | Updated on: 04 Sep 2018, 09:09:03 AM
Japanese firm to launch love satellites (Representational Image)

New Delhi:

A Japanese firm linked with the University of Tsukuba is all set to launch small satellites with titanium plaques carrying love messages into space by the end of 2019. Interested would be able to engrave messages of their choice on the plaques, which could be 1.8 centimetres long and 0.8 centimetre wide. The message would then be carried to space and orbit around the earth for two years before being destroyed. 

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The CubeSat satellites can carry up to 600 pure titanium plaques which then would be transported to the International Space Station (ISS) by a rocket of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.

“In the ISS, the astronauts stationed there will take photographs of the ultra-small satellite which would be then sent to people for confirmation that their messages have reached space,” Warspace CEO Toshihiro Kameda said.

Earlier, the firm planned to offer this service exclusively to the couples getting married at a hotel in Tsukuba, in Ibaraki prefecture, for the price of $270, but in the face of growing demand it decided to expand its offer and set up an online order facility in September.

Although they have not determined the number of people interested in the service yet, couples from Japan, the US and Taiwan have contacted the company. 

“The mini satellites and the plaques would be destroyed after two years by burning up when they come in contact with Earth's atmosphere,” said Kameda, a professor who teaches the mechanics of materials at the University of Tsukuba.

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“If this service receives a good response, Warspace would expand its business and will send out more commemorative objects into space which would later return to Earth,” the head of the project said. 

 

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First Published : 04 Sep 2018, 07:23:21 AM

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