Astronomers announced the discovery of a new asteroid zooming close to Earth — only to learn it was actually a Tesla Roadster launched by Elon Musk seven years ago

Astronomers announced the discovery of a new asteroid zooming close to Earth — only to learn it was actually a Tesla Roadster launched by Elon Musk seven years ago


FOX NEWS 


Elon Musk’s sense of humor is out of this world.

Seven years after the SpaceX CEO launched a Tesla Roadster into orbit, astronomers from the Minor Planet Center at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts confused it with an asteroid earlier this month.

A day after the astronomers with the Minor Planet Center registered 2018 CN41, it was deleted on Jan. 3 when they revealed that it was in fact Musk’s roadster.

The center said on its website that 2018 CN41’s registry was deleted after “it was pointed out the orbit matches an artificial object, 2018-017A, Falcon Heavy Upper stage with the Tesla Roadster. The designation2018 CN41 is being deleted and will be listed as omitted.”

SpaceX launched the Tesla Roadster on the maiden flight of SpaceX’s huge Falcon Heavy rocket in February 2018.

The roadster was expected to go into elliptical orbit around the sun, going a little beyond Mars and back toward Earth, but it apparently exceeded the orbit of Mars and kept going to the asteroid belt, according to Musk at the time…

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Astronomers announced the discovery of a new asteroid zooming close to Earth — only to learn it was actually a Tesla Roadster launched by Elon Musk seven years ago

 

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