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hbgator
Fri 01 Feb, 2008

NASA launching Beatles tune into space
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Fri Feb 1,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> 11:07 AM ET<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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The Beatles are about to become radio stars in a whole new way.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> NASA on Monday will broadcast the Beatles'<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> song <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"Across the Universe"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> across the galaxy to Polaris,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the North Star.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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This first-ever beaming of a radio song by the space agency directly into deep space is nostalgia-driven.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> It celebrates the 40th anniversary of the song,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the 45th anniversary of NASA's Deep Space Network,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> which communicates with its distant probes,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> and the 50th anniversary of NASA.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"Send my love to the aliens,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Paul McCartney told NASA through a Beatles historian.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"All the best,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Paul.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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The song,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> written by McCartney and John Lennon,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> may have a ticket to ride and will be flying at the speed of light.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> But it will take 431 years along a long and winding road to reach its final destination.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> That's because Polaris is 2.5 quadrillion miles away.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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NASA loaded an MP3 of the song,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> just under four minutes in its original version,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> and will transmit it digitally at 7 p.m.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> EST Monday from its giant antenna in Madrid,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Spain.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> But if you wanted to hear it on Polaris,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> you would need an antenna and a receiver to convert it back to music,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the same way people receive satellite television.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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The idea came from Martin Lewis,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> a Los Angeles-based Beatles historian,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> who then got permission from McCartney,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Yoko Ono and the two companies that own the rights to Beatles'<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> music.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> One of those companies,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Apple,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> was happy to approve the idea because is <b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"always looking for new markets,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>"<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> Lewis said.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b><b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
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Perhaps coincidentally,<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b> the song's launching comes a day before the release of the DVD of the Julie Taymor movie named after the Beatles hit.<b style="color:#FFA34F"></b>
