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The Planetary Society is a large, publicly supported, not-for-profit organization that has many research projects related to astronomy. It is based in Pasadena, California (the same city as NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory) but has an international membership. It was founded in 1980 by Carl Sagan, Bruce Murray, and Louis Friedman. The Society is dedicated to the exploration of Mars and the rest of the Solar System, the search for Near Earth Objects, and the search for extraterrestrial life. Its mission is "To inspire the people of Earth through education, research, and public participation to explore other worlds and seek other life."

The Society launched the Cosmos 1 craft in June 2005 to test the feasibility of Solar sailing, but the satellite's launch rocket failed shortly after liftoff. It is now raising seed funding for the next solar sail spacecraft.

Its current Board of Directors includes the following:

Notable members of its Advisory Council include:

Projects


The Planetary Society sponsors projects to seed further exploration. Members privately fund these projects:

The Planetary Report


The Planetary Report is the bimonthly flagship magazine of the Society. As one of the membership benefits, it reaches over 100,000 members six times a year (as of 2005). Over 90 percent of Society members view it as their first source of news about space exploration.

External links


Space advocacy | 1980 establishments | Pasadena, California | Astronomy organizations

The Planetary Society | La Sociedad Planetaria | Planeda Societo | The Planetary Society | האגודה הפלנטרית | 惑星協会 | The Planetary Society | Sociedade Planetária | Planetary Society

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Planetary Society".

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