Falling satellite danger over

Falling satellite danger over

Debris from an obliterated United States spy satellite is being tracked over the Pacific and Atlantic oceans but appears to be too small to cause any damage on Earth, a senior military officer said yesterday, just hours after a Navy missile scored a direct hit on the failing satellite.

Marine Gen. James Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and an expert on military space technologies, told a Pentagon news conference that officials have a “high degree of confidence” that the missile launched from a Navy cruiser Wednesday night hit exactly where intended. He estimated there was an 80-90 per cent chance that the missile struck the most important target on the satellite – its fuel tank, containing 1 000 pounds of hydrazine, which Pentagon officials say could have posed a health hazard to humans if it had landed in a populated area.Unlike most spacecraft that fall out of orbit and re-enter the atmosphere, this satellite had an almost full fuel tank because it lost power and became uncontrollable shortly after it reached its initial orbit in December 2006.Cartwright said the hydrazine alone was justification for undertaking the unprecedented effort to use a Navy missile interceptor to attempt to destroy the satellite in orbit.Cartwright said experts were still watching the debris fields and he could not yet rule out that hazardous material would fall to Earth.But he indicated that this appeared unlikely to pose a problem.”Thus far we’ve seen nothing larger than a football,” he said, referring to debris spotted by radars and other sensors.Debris from the satellite has started re-entry and will continue through yesterday and into today.The size of the debris is smaller than the Pentagon had forecast and most of the satellite’s intelligence value was likely destroyed, Cartwright said.- Nampa-APHe estimated there was an 80-90 per cent chance that the missile struck the most important target on the satellite – its fuel tank, containing 1 000 pounds of hydrazine, which Pentagon officials say could have posed a health hazard to humans if it had landed in a populated area.Unlike most spacecraft that fall out of orbit and re-enter the atmosphere, this satellite had an almost full fuel tank because it lost power and became uncontrollable shortly after it reached its initial orbit in December 2006.Cartwright said the hydrazine alone was justification for undertaking the unprecedented effort to use a Navy missile interceptor to attempt to destroy the satellite in orbit.Cartwright said experts were still watching the debris fields and he could not yet rule out that hazardous material would fall to Earth.But he indicated that this appeared unlikely to pose a problem.”Thus far we’ve seen nothing larger than a football,” he said, referring to debris spotted by radars and other sensors.Debris from the satellite has started re-entry and will continue through yesterday and into today.The size of the debris is smaller than the Pentagon had forecast and most of the satellite’s intelligence value was likely destroyed, Cartwright said.- Nampa-AP

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