The Russian craft was being monitored by Pentagon organizations that keep track of space debris in order to prevent in-orbit collisions from damaging or destroying both commercial and government satellites. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Pentagon track more than 10,000 pieces of high-speed debris, some no larger than a football. [...]
Cosmos satellites have been designed for various uses, from spy missions to missile-warning systems to securing military communications. They have caused a number of scary incidents over the years, including a 1991 collision between one defunct model and debris from another; a near-collision with the space shuttle the same year; and another that crashed into Canadian wilderness in 1978. [...]
Pentagon officials will face a barrage of questions about how they missed such an impending collision with an intact satellite, according to Tim Farrar, a satellite consultant familiar with Iridium. Commercial satellites are "routinely repositioned to avoid potential collision with smaller pieces of debris," said Mr. Farrar.
I remember in the 1980s there was a Kosmos being launched almost every week.
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Date: 2009-02-18 09:28 pm (UTC)The Russian craft was being monitored by Pentagon organizations that keep track of space debris in order to prevent in-orbit collisions from damaging or destroying both commercial and government satellites. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Pentagon track more than 10,000 pieces of high-speed debris, some no larger than a football. [...]
Cosmos satellites have been designed for various uses, from spy missions to missile-warning systems to securing military communications. They have caused a number of scary incidents over the years, including a 1991 collision between one defunct model and debris from another; a near-collision with the space shuttle the same year; and another that crashed into Canadian wilderness in 1978. [...]
Pentagon officials will face a barrage of questions about how they missed such an impending collision with an intact satellite, according to Tim Farrar, a satellite consultant familiar with Iridium. Commercial satellites are "routinely repositioned to avoid potential collision with smaller pieces of debris," said Mr. Farrar.
I remember in the 1980s there was a Kosmos being launched almost every week.