Pocari Sweat is a
popular Japanese soft drink and sports drink, manufactured by Otsuka
Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. It was launched in 1980, and is now also available in
East Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East.
Pocari Sweat is a mild-tasting, relatively light, non-carbonated sweet beverage
and is advertised as an "ion supply drink".
It has a mild grapefruit
flavor with little aftertaste. Ingredients listed are water, sugar, citric
acid, trisodium citrate, sodium chloride, potassium chloride, calcium lactate,
magnesium carbonate, and flavoring. It
is sold in aluminum cans, PET bottles, and as a powder for mixing with water.
The reference to
sweat in the name of the beverage tends to have a certain off-putting or
humorous connotation for native English speakers. However, the name was chosen
by the manufacturers originally for the purpose of marketing the product as a
sports drink in Japan,
where English words are used differently.
It was largely derived from the
notion of what it is intended to supply to the drinker: all of the nutrients
and electrolytes lost when sweating.
The buzz is that
the Japanese beverage company is planning to send the first advert on the Moon
next year in the form of a soft drink and letters by children from across Asia. A one-kilogramme titanium container will be carried
to the lunar surface aboard the first planned private Moon landing mission in
October 2015. The canister will be filled with the Otsuka's powdered sports
drink called Pocari Sweat, and letters sent by children from across Asia etched onto silver disks.
The capsule will
be conveyed to the moon by the Falcon 9 rocket. The Falcon 9, designed to be a
potentially reusable means of space travel by Elon Musk's SpaceX, has already
made three successful supply runs to the International Space Station, but the
planned mission in October 2015 would be the first time one of its rockets has
successfully provided propulsion to the moon. After the Falcon 9 rocket has
ignited its second-stage boosters and completed a four-and-a-half day journey
to the moon, the Pocari Sweat-branded canister will be deposited on the surface
by private company Astrobotic Technology's "Griffin" lander.
Pittsburgh-based
Astrobotic Technology has more important reasons to be up on the moon than to
leave a beverage can on its face. The company is angling to win Google's Lunar
X prize, a $20-million bounty for the first company to land a device on the
moon that can both travel 500 meters on the surface and transmit high-definition
pictures back to Earth. Astrobotic's deal with Otsuka will provide them with
funds to achieve this goal — the company reportedly charges upwards of half a
million dollars for lunar delivery — but the mission to drop a can is somewhat
ironic: Astrobotic is a company that develops technologies for clearing space
trash.
With regards – S. Sampathkumar
Input credits due to : www.theverge.com and www.dailymail.co.uk
