Planetary Resources surpassed its $1 million crowdfunding goal June 19, green-lighting the asteroid-mining companyโ€™s plans to deploy a publicly accessible space telescope in 2015.

More than 11,000 people pledged at least $10 to the project, which promises to not only capture images of its supportersโ€™ selected astronomical targets with the Arkyd space telescope but also photograph their submitted self-portraits on a digital screen mounted on the outside of the small satellite. 

โ€œThank you everyone who pushed it over the $1 million mark!โ€ Peter Diamandis, Planetary Resourcesโ€™ co-founder, wrote on Kickstarter, the website that is hosting the crowdfunding campaign.

It took 20 days to raise the $1 million. The company continued to take pledges through June 30.

Planetary Resources intends to mine near-Earth asteroids for resources such as water and precious metals, with the ultimate goal of helping expand humanityโ€™s footprint out into the solar system. The company has designed its Arkyd-100 space telescope to search for potential target space rocks.

โ€œOur primary goal has been to build technology enabling us to prospect and mine asteroids,โ€ the company wrote on its website promoting the funding campaign. โ€œWeโ€™ve spent the last year making great leaps in the development of these technologies. These advancements have presented us with the opportunity to engage in another passion of our team: to make space exploration accessible to everyone.โ€

Planetary Resources launched the crowdfunding drive May 29 during an event held at the Museum in Flight in Seattle.

For a $25 pledge, the company offered to upload a photo of the backerโ€™s choice to the Arkyd, display it on a small digital screen mounted on the exterior of the satellite and then capture it in a photo with the Earthโ€™s horizon looming in the background. The โ€œSpace Selfieโ€ promises to be the first orbital โ€œphoto booth,โ€ delivering digital images (or prints at higher pledge levels) to the supporters.

For pledges beginning at $99, supportersโ€™ funds contribute to studentsโ€™ and scientistsโ€™ research using the Arkyd. For $200, backers can opt to point the telescope at an astronomical target of their choosing. A $5,000 pledge buys the chance to identify a school, university or museum to receive observation time.

At the top level of support, $10,000 or more, backers are offered tours of Planetary Resourcesโ€™ facilities, invitations to the Arkyd launch, the opportunity to etch their name on the space telescope and the chance to name one of the asteroids that the Arkyd is expected to discover.

Planetary Resources also lists โ€œadd-onsโ€ to the pledges, including T-shirts and greeting cards printed with supportersโ€™ astronomical or โ€œSpace Selfieโ€ images, an Arkyd embroidered mission patch and a half-scale model of the space telescope.

With $1 million behind them, Planetary Resources announced โ€œstretch goals,โ€ including adding an additional ground station at $1.3 million, a digital โ€œBeta Selfieโ€ taken of each supporterโ€™s self-photo during the space telescopeโ€™s build up at $1.5 million, and a $1.7 million โ€œmystery goalโ€ that the company says it will reveal when the campaign reaches 15,000 backers.

Ultimately, Planetary Resources wants to double its goal. At $2 million, the company will add the ability for its Arkyd space telescope to help in the search for alien planets.

โ€œWeโ€™re not done yet,โ€ Chris Lewicki, Planetary Resourcesโ€™ president, said in a video released late June 19. โ€œWe have got stretch goals out there, the $2 million alien-hunter goal, where we turn the Arkyd into a planet finder.โ€

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