Brian May has a doctorate degree in astrophysics.This wasn't his first NASA collaboration.May is also credited with writing some of Queen's most enduring hits.
Sign up for the Morning Brief email newsletterto get weekday updates from The Weather Channel and our meteorologists.
NASA's first-of-its kind mission to deliver an asteroid sample to Earth is remarkable in many ways. One of them involves the legendary lead guitar player for one of the most famous rock bands on the planet: Brian May of Queen.
, who holds a doctorate degree in astrophysics, is credited with helping to map the asteroid Bennu as part of , a mission launched by NASA in 2016 to fly into outer space and retrieve a sample of Bennu.
The capsule carrying the sample landed in the Utah desert Sunday.
May has worked with a scientist named for several years to create realistic 3D images, called stereos, out of images posted online from various space missions. A business owned by May called London Stereoscopic Company makes a special eyepiece to view stereo photos.
May sent OSIRIS-REx mission director Dante Lauretta some stereos made from OSIRIS-REx mission images.
"And he was ," May told Space.com in a recent interview. "He said 'I have never seen it like this, this is such a great tool and this might be able to help us find the landing site that we need in order to get that sample safely.'"
May worked with Manzoni, Lauretta and others to and help find a landing zone for the probe that collected the sample, according to University of Arizona Press, which published the images in a book in July. "Bennu 3-D, Anatomy of an Asteroid" has six co-authors including May, Lauretta and Manzoni.
Astrophysicist and rock legend Brian May is recognized during a July 17, 2015, New Horizons science briefing at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C.
(Credits: NASA/Joel Kowsky)
May from Imperial College London with a degree in physics and math before he formed Queen in 1970 with lead singer Freddie Mercury and guitarist Roger Taylor, according to his bio in IMDB. He earned a Ph.D. from the college in 2007.
The Bennu effort wasn't May's first involvement with NASA. In 2015, he was as a science collaborator on NASA's New Horizons mission, which sent a spacecraft to fly past Pluto. May created the first-ever high quality stereo image of Pluto.
"I am on the outside of NASA, nobody pays me, but I love it," May told Space.com.
He is also credited as songwriter on many of Queen's most enduring hits, including "We Will Rock You," "I Want It All" and "Who Wants To Live Forever."
-SpaceX Falcon 9 Launches Satellite To Monitor Air Pollution On Earth, Every Hour
-Photo Captures Boy's Joy Of Seeing Starship Launch
-Voyager 2 Phones Home After Communications Lost
-Happy Anniversary To The James Webb Space Telescope. Here Are Some Of Our Favorite Photos
The Weather Company’s primary journalistic mission is to report on breaking weather news, the environment and the importance of science to our lives. This story does not necessarily represent the position of our parent company, .