QuickBird1 Is A Loss 9
daveg writes: "Earthwatch of Longmont CO has lost their second commercial high resolution imaging satellite. The first loss was EarlyBird1 in December 1997. EarlyBird1 went silent after 4 days, it was capable of 3m resolution. QuickBird1 was capable of 1m resolution from a Kodak sensor system. The launch from Russia's Plesetsk Cosmodome was first thought to have not achieved orbit but now appears to have reached orbit then disappeared from the visibility zone of Russian radio equipment and since has not responded to the signals sent by Russian ground stations. QuickBird1 rode on a converted
ICBM design, first launched in 1967, with a record of 398 successful orbital flights out of 420 launches."
I wonder why (Score:1)
I remember that the other private imaging satelite [with, if I recall, 10 or 15 meter resolution] was only allowed to be lauched due to the companies consent to pre-censoring of certain areas by the Feds.
Were they perhaps trying to get around such restraints by lauching in europe and avoiding US oversight? Beats me; sorry to add anything more to the conspiracy fodder supply.
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man sig
Bad karma? (Score:1)
NASA losses a Mars lander and now, EarthWatch losses its second satellite.
Glad I haven't invested in them.
the_crowbar
Re:I wonder why (Score:1)
Re:I wonder why (Score:1)
It's been hacked... (Score:1)
Re:I wonder why (Score:1)
Excellent Paper - A must read if you're interested (Score:3)
From the paper: President Bill Clinton made history as the first US president to use the line-item veto, targeting three ASAT programs with his pen, including the Army's Kinetic Energy Antisatellite Program. According to Robert Bell, special assistant to the president and senior director for defense policy and arms control on the National Security Council (NSC), although the administration recognizes the need for space control, it "doesn't necessarily believe at this time that the Army program is the appropriate solution." The White House would rather forgo attacking the satellites themselves, and instead find ways to destroy or disrupt the information downlinked by the satellites.
I think that pretty much sums up the conspiracy. It makes sense though - why waste time and money making anti-satellite weapons when you can shut down their control centres here on the ground through some veil of 'national defence interests' by employing a handful of federal agents or whatever.
10-15m?? (Score:1)
TA
Re:I wonder why (Score:2)