Missile Hits Spy Satellite

Posted February 20th, 2008 in International, National, Politics, Space AddThis Social Bookmark Button


HarpBlaster.com wire reports

WASHINGTON — The military successfully struck an out-of-control spy satellite with a missile fired today from a U.S. warship in the Pacific.

Today’s return of the space shuttle Atlantis to Earth prompted the start of the optimal time period for shooting down the satellite, which extends until about the end of the month, the senior officer told Pentagon reporters.

Only “tens of seconds” will be available each day for a favorable launch of a ship-based SM-3 interceptor missile, the senior officer said. “The window is small, … but we’re looking for the best orientation of the satellite” before launching the missile, the officer explained.

“We are going to maximize our opportunities to, one, destroy the tank in outer space, and, two, to bring the debris down in a way in which it mitigates risk to humans,” Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said.

The 5,000-pound satellite malfunctioned soon after it was launched in 2006, making it unresponsive to ground control. It is carrying a tank full of hydrazine, a toxic rocket fuel. The satellite, orbiting every 90 minutes or so, was expected to fall to Earth in February or March with its tank of hydrazine intact, possibly endangering human populations.

President Bush directed the Defense Department to engage the satellite just before it enters the atmosphere at about 150 miles above the Earth. The goal is for the missile to hit and rupture the tank of rocket fuel, causing the hydrazine to burn up harmlessly in the atmosphere, along with debris from the stricken satellite.

About 50 percent of debris produced by the missile strike is expected to burn up during the stricken satellite’s first two orbits after being hit, the senior military officer said, with the rest burning up shortly after.

– Adapted from an American Forces Press Service news article.

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