logo
Space burial goes wrong: Capsule with remains of 166 people and cannabis seeds crashes into Pacific ocean

Space burial goes wrong: Capsule with remains of 166 people and cannabis seeds crashes into Pacific ocean

Time of India05-07-2025
A space capsule carrying the
ashes of 166 people
, along with a collection of
cannabis seeds
, was lost after crashing into the
Pacific Ocean
during reentry. The capsule, part of a mission called "
Mission Possible
" by German aerospace start-up The Exploration Company (TEC), launched on June 23, 2025. Its cargo, arranged through Texas-based
space burial
firm
Celestis
, successfully completed two orbits around Earth before communication was lost. While the mission aimed to be Celestis's first to return from orbit, a reentry anomaly led to the capsule's destruction and the scattering of its contents at sea.
Space burial mission ends in loss after promising start
The
Nyx
capsule, designed and launched by The Exploration Company, initially performed well. It powered its payloads in orbit, stabilized after launch separation, and briefly re-established communication during reentry. However, the company lost contact just minutes before splashdown. TEC confirmed the capsule crashed into the Pacific Ocean, with no materials recovered.
This was Celestis's first attempt at a return-from-orbit space burial, carrying remains of 166 individuals entrusted by families around the world. The mission also carried cannabis seeds as part of the Martian Grow project, a citizen science initiative aimed at exploring the potential of farming cannabis on Mars. TEC has only launched one other capsule prior to Nyx, and while they hailed several technical milestones, they acknowledged the risks involved and expressed a commitment to relaunching in the future.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Giao dịch CFD với công nghệ và tốc độ tốt hơn
IC Markets
Đăng ký
Undo
Families mourn while celestis promises support
Celestis co-founder Charles M. Chafer expressed disappointment and offered condolences to the families involved. He acknowledged the bravery of those who chose to participate in a first-of-its-kind return mission and emphasized the symbolic value of having their loved ones orbit Earth before their final resting place in the Pacific Ocean. Despite the tragic outcome, he noted that many milestones — launch, orbit, and controlled reentry — had been achieved.
The company has reached out to affected families to offer support and discuss possible next steps. In his words, while no technical feat can replace the personal meaning behind such missions, 'we remain committed to serving with transparency, compassion, and care.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Agilent opens new biopharma centre in Hyd
Agilent opens new biopharma centre in Hyd

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Agilent opens new biopharma centre in Hyd

Hyderabad: US-based analytical and clinical laboratory technologies player Agilent Technologies Inc has opened its new biopharma experience centre in Hyderabad. The facility will offer advanced laboratory technologies, expert training, and regulatory-ready workflows to expedite the development of high-quality, life-saving medicines. It will provide comprehensive solutions in chromatography, mass spectrometry, cell analysis, and lab informatics, enabling companies to simulate real lab environments and develop market-ready solutions, Agilent said. The new centre will also drive collaboration between industry and academia, support faster R&D, and align with international regulatory standards. Inaugurating the new facility on Tuesday, Telangana IT and industries minister Duddila Sridhar Babu said the centre will bolster Hyderabad's position as a leader in life sciences and healthcare innovation. He said Hyderabad's robust life sciences ecosystem contributes to nearly one-third of India's pharmaceutical production and 40% of bulk drug exports. You Can Also Check: Hyderabad AQI | Weather in Hyderabad | Bank Holidays in Hyderabad | Public Holidays in Hyderabad Agilent Technologies CEO Padraig McDonnell said: "India is a strategic growth market for Agilent, and Hyderabad is at the forefront of biopharma innovation. This new centre reflects our commitment to delivering integrated solutions that help bring life-changing therapies to market faster and more efficiently. It also reinforces our support for the 'Make-in-India' initiative by empowering local innovation, nurturing talent, and enabling scalable, affordable, and sustainable solutions. " He said the investment is part of the company's broader strategy to expand its footprint in India and position it as a strategic hub in its global innovation roadmap.

New species of rain snake recorded in Mizoram
New species of rain snake recorded in Mizoram

The Hindu

time5 hours ago

  • The Hindu

New species of rain snake recorded in Mizoram

GUWAHATI A team of researchers from Mizoram University and Guwahati-based biodiversity conservation group Help Earth have recorded a new species of rain snake from an elevated tropical forest in Mizoram. The narrow-banded rain snake (Smithophis leptofasciatus) has been described in the latest issue of Taprobanica: The Journal of Asian Biodiversity. The authors of the study — Lal Muansanga, Jayaditya Purkayastha, Vanlal Hruaia, Mathipi Vabeiryureilai, Lal Biakzuala, Ht Decemson, Hmar T. Lalremsanga, and Sanath C. Bohra — proposed 'Ruahrul' as the new-to-science snake's Mizo name. Rain snakes are so named because they become more active and visible during the rainy season. The authors said the description was based on detailed morphological and molecular analyses of two collected specimens, along with observations of several live individuals. The new species is distinguished by its narrow, incomplete creamish-white or yellowish-lime transverse bands on a shiny black body — features that set it apart from its close relatives. 'Our study confirmed that this snake, previously identified as Smithophis bicolor, is a genetically and morphologically distinct species. It not only adds to the growing diversity within the genus Smithophis, but also redefines the distribution of previously known species,' Dr. Purkayastha, one of the corresponding authors, said. The species name leptofasciatus is a Greek and Latin hybrid, meaning 'narrow-banded', referencing the snake's distinctive dorsal markings. The narrow-banded rain snake was found inhabiting humid, shaded microhabitats near small streams in forests between 900 and 1,200 meters above sea level. Its semi-aquatic, nocturnal lifestyle was revealed through field observations during the monsoon. A gravid female observed in captivity laid six eggs, providing rare reproductive data for this elusive group. This is the third Smithophis species to be described from Mizoram after the Smithophis atemporalis and the Smithophis mizoramensis. 'The new species reinforces Mizoram's importance as a biodiversity hotspot. The State plays a central role in the evolution and diversification of this genus,' said Dr. Lalremsanga, the co-author and head of the Developmental Biology and Herpetology Lab at Mizoram University. The study recommended additional surveys and habitat assessments, as the narrow range and forest dependency of the narrow-banded rain snake suggest it may be vulnerable to habitat degradation.

80 years of Hiroshima: When Japan burned, but the Soviets got the message
80 years of Hiroshima: When Japan burned, but the Soviets got the message

India Today

time9 hours ago

  • India Today

80 years of Hiroshima: When Japan burned, but the Soviets got the message

Eighty years ago, on August 6, 1945, a city woke up to a regular morning -- and was turned into dust within seconds. Hiroshima, Japan, became the first place in the world to be attacked with an atomic what many still don't know is that behind this strike wasn't just revenge or war strategy. It was rumour that fuelled it -- a fearful political strike in a rapidly shifting world WORLD AT WAR, BUT JAPAN WAS ALREADY FALLINGBy mid-1945, the world was exhausted. World War II had been dragging on for six bloody years. Nazi Germany had already surrendered in May. Field Marshall Keitel signs German surrender terms in Berlin, May 8, 1945 (Photo: WIkimedia Commons) In the East, Japan was cornered, isolated, and nearly defeated. Most of its fleet had been destroyed, and American firebombing had reduced Tokyo and several other cities to surrender seemed like a matter of time. Yet, on that fateful August morning, the US chose to drop a new kind of weapon -- something the world had never seen before -- on a largely civilian Hiroshima in 1948 (Photo: AFP) THE SCIENTIST WHO UNLEASHED A MONSTERA few years earlier, a group of scientists -- many of them refugees who had fled from Hitler's Europe -- had begun secretly working in the US on something terrifying: a bomb that could unleash the destructive power of the atom. It was called the Manhattan of the key scientists was a brilliant physicist named J Robert Oppenheimer. He had studied ancient Indian texts, and after the first successful test of the bomb in July 1945, he quoted the Bhagavad Gita: 'Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.'The line, uttered by Lord Krishna in the epic, captured exactly what he felt -- power, fear, and a sense that something irreversible had just bomb worked, only too well. THE GERMAN SHADOW THAT LOOMED LARGEBut here's the twist. The US didn't just race to make the bomb to defeat Japan. Japan was near surrender, fact, they feared Germany might be building one first. German scientists had discovered nuclear fission back in 1938. The fear was that if Hitler got to the bomb first, the consequences would be fear, which was never quite confirmed, pushed Americans to invest billions, round up the best scientists in the world, and rush the project to by the time the bomb was ready, Hitler was already dead. Germany had surrendered. Japan was still fighting, yes, but not strong enough to pose any real threat to the Allies. So why drop the bomb? Little Boy atomic bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima () THE POWER GAME BEYOND THE WARThe answer lies not just in what happened in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but in what came the time the mushroom clouds cleared, a new rivalry was quietly igniting. The United States and the Soviet Union, once uneasy allies against Hitler, were already sizing each other up for the next global showdown. The war had ended, but the game for dominance had only just what better way to tilt the board than by unveiling the deadliest weapon the world had ever seen?Historians have long debated whether Japan's surrender was the only reason the bomb was used. One of the most prominent voices, Gar Alperovitz, in his landmark book Atomic Diplomacy: Hiroshima and Potsdam, argued that the bomb served a second purpose: to show the Soviet Union exactly who was boss in the post-war to Alperovitz, 'gaining diplomatic leverage against the Soviet Union was a major consideration in the atomic bombing.' HL Stimson (l) and Eisenhower (r) (Photos: Wikimedia Commons) That line of thinking wasn't limited to historians. Inside the US government, similar views were brewing. Henry Stimson, then Secretary of War, described the bomb in his memoirs not just as a military tool, but as a 'psychological weapon,' designed to create a 'tremendous shock' that would shake Japan into surrender and show America's strength on the world Stimson worried that flaunting the bomb 'ostentatiously on our hip' would only fuel Soviet paranoia, and trigger an arms race. He was General Dwight D Eisenhower, who had commanded Allied forces in Europe, later admitted that he believed the bombings weren't necessary to end the war. Japan, he said, was already on the verge of unease grew stronger as he realised the real audience for the atomic spectacle might not have been Japan at all -- but Joseph Stalin, watching from yes, the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings ended a war. But they may have also started something else: the Cold War. And in that light, the bombs were not just about victory. They were a signal. A threat. A warning shot fired into a new world order. Smoke cloud after nuclear attack on Hiroshima (Photo: AFP) THE CITY THAT NEVER SAW IT COMINGAt 8:15 am on August 6, 1945, a US bomber named Enola Gay dropped a single bomb over Hiroshima. It was called 'Little Boy'. In seconds, the city vanished in a blinding evaporated where they stood. Buildings were flattened. Rivers boiled. Around 80,000 people died instantly. Thousands more would die later from radiation and days later, the US dropped another bomb on Nagasaki. Combined deaths reached nearly 200,000. Japan surrendered soon even today, the question remains: was it even necessary? Japan's Mamoru Shigemitsu signs the Instrument of Surrender, officially ending the Second World War 1945 (Photo: Wikimedia Commons) THE REGRET THAT CAME LATERAlbert Einstein, the genius whose theories laid the groundwork for nuclear physics, had once written to US President Franklin D Roosevelt urging him to develop the atom bomb, fearing Nazi Germany would get there first. Written with Leo Szilrd and Eugene Wigner, it warned that Hitler might weaponise he never worked on the Manhattan Project, it was Einstein's 1939 letter to Roosevelt that helped set the whole project in the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Einstein deeply regretted his role. He famously said, 'Had I known that the Germans would not succeed in developing an atomic bomb, I would have done nothing for the bomb.' Franklin D Roosevelt (l) and Oppenheimer (r) (Photos: Wikimedia Commons) He called signing the letter the 'one great mistake of my life.' He co-founded the Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists and helped draft the Russell-Einstein Manifesto, warning the world: 'Remember your humanity, and forget the rest.'Even Oppenheimer, celebrated and feared as the 'father of the atomic bomb,' faced a storm of guilt. In a post-war meeting with the US President, he reportedly said, 'Mr. President, I feel I have blood on my hands.'REMEMBERING HIROSHIMA 80 YEARS LATERToday, Hiroshima stands as both a thriving city and a chilling reminder of what happens when science and power fall into the wrong hands. Peace memorials, survivor testimonies, and museums keep the memory alive -- not for revenge, but as a warning. devastated city of Hiroshima after the first atomic bomb was dropped by a US Air Force B-29 on August 6, 1945 (Photo: AFP) Eighty years on, the world is still struggling with the legacy of that day. Some 12,500 nuclear warheads still exist worldwide. Nations still test missiles. Tensions still rise and fall, much like they did in atom bomb on Hiroshima didn't win a war. Politics did, along with the fear of what Hitler might build, inspired by rumours, and paid for in remains a symbol: scientific ambition, political expedience, and moral reckoning interwoven into one lethal moment. The story still confronts us: will we keep chasing death, or learn to choose differently?- Ends

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store