Skip to main content

Send your name to space as part of Europa Clipper mission

Traveling to space may be the stuff of dreams for most folks, but sending your name instead is a distinct possibility.

It’s not quite the same as donning a spacesuit and being blasted to orbit, though it could be a fun way to associate yourself with an upcoming and highly ambitious mission heading toward Jupiter next year.

NASA is inviting anyone who’s interested to submit their name to have it engraved on the Europa Clipper spacecraft, which will be traveling 1.8 billion miles to explore Jupiter’s Europa moon.

Love space but nervous to travel 1.8 billion miles? That’s okay!

Leave your mark by having your name engraved on the @EuropaClipper spacecraft! #SendYourName here: https://t.co/GRj0tfoBEp pic.twitter.com/VQfzKGidRe

— NASA Goddard (@NASAGoddard) June 10, 2023

Accompanying the names will be a piece of written work called In Praise of Mystery: A Poem for Europa, written by U.S. poet laureate Ada Limón. NASA is describing the initiative as “Message in a Bottle” as it involves sending a greeting from Earth to the darkest depths of our solar system.

“Message in a Bottle is the perfect convergence of science, art, and technology, and we are excited to share with the world the opportunity to be a part of Europa Clipper’s journey,” said Nicola Fox, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. “I just love the thought that our names will be traveling across our solar system aboard the radiation-tolerant spacecraft that seeks to unlock the secrets of Jupiter’s frozen moon.”

Europa Clipper is scheduled to launch from Cape Canaveral, Florida, in October 2024, and take six years to reach its destination. As it orbits Jupiter and performs multiple flybys of Europa, a suite of science instruments will collect data on the moon’s subsurface ocean, ice crust, and atmosphere.

The main goal of the Europa Clipper mission is to discover if there are any places below the surface of Europa that could support life. It will also seek to understand the nature of the ice shell and the ocean beneath it, and also learn more about the moon’s composition and geology.

“The mission’s detailed exploration of Europa will help scientists better understand the astrobiological potential for habitable worlds beyond our planet,” NASA said.

But before the mission gets underway, earthlings have an excellent chance to get involved. So if you fancy sending your name on a space voyage, you know what to do.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
See the surface of Jupiter’s icy moon Europa in unprecedented detail
image of an area called Crisscrossing Bands

Jupiter's icy moon Europa is a fascinating place and is of particular interest to astronomers for several reasons. It is known to host both water vapor and table salt, and has been suggested as being one of the locations in our solar system most likely to be hospitable to life thanks to its water-ice crust and a thin oxygen atmosphere.

NASA plans to send the Europa Clipper mission to the moon, launching in 2025, to search for subsurface lakes and evidence of recent water eruptions there. The European Space Agency's JUICE mission to Ganymede will also perform two flybys of Europa after it launches in 2022.

Read more
Rocket Lab blasts into the record books with 50th Electron launch
Rocket Lab's 50th Electron launch.

Rocket Lab conducts its 50th Electron launch on June 20. Rocket Lab

New Zealand-based company Rocket Lab has hit an impressive milestone with the 50th launch of its Electron rocket. Like SpaceX, the company provides commercial launch services, carrying payloads into near-Earth orbit for private companies and providing services for space agencies like NASA. According to the company, the Electron rocket has reached 50 launches faster than any other commercially developed rocket.

Read more
Starliner’s return to Earth delayed again, until next month
Boeing's Starliner capsule docked at the ISS.

The Boeing Starliner that is currently docked at the International Space Station (ISS) after making its first crewed test flight will not be returning to Earth this week as planned. The return of the Starliner has already been delayed once, but now NASA has announced that the return will not take place until early July.

The Starliner launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on June 6 and made it safely to the ISS carrying NASA astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore. However, there were problems with helium leaks both before and during the journey as well as an issue with the spacecraft's reaction control thrusters that required two attempts at docking.

Read more