Beatles to travel 'Across the Universe'
The Beatles' classic 'Across the Universe' is to become the first ever song to be beamed at once into space next hebdomad, National Aeronautics and Space Administration has confirmed.
Paul Paul McCartney said it was an "amazing" achievement and Gospel According to John Lennon's widow Yoko Ono called it the "beginning of a fresh historic period".
The transmission of the song over the infinite agency's Deep Space Network on Monday will marking the 40th anniversary of the day the stripe recorded the song.
The song will be aimed at the Union Lead, Polaris, 431 luminance years away from Globe, and it volition travel across the universe at a focal ratio of 186,000 miles per moment.
In a message to the space agency, Sir James Paul McCartney said: "Amazing! Well done, NASA! Mail my beloved to the aliens. Entirely the best, Paul."
Yoko Yoko Ono added: "I see that this as the commencement of the newly age in which we will commune with billions of planets across the existence."
Fans cause been invited to participate in the event by playing the call around the world at midnight Greenwich Mean Time on Monday night - the same time it will be transmitted by National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
The outcome will as well mark 50 days of National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 45 days of the Deep Space Network and 50 geezerhood since the creation of Explorer 1, the number 1 US satellite.
The Trench Space Network is an international mesh of antennas that supports missions to explore the population.
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