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NEW NASA RADAR TECHNIQUE FINDS LOST LUNAR SPACECRAFT
Finding derelict spacecraft and space debris in Earth’s orbit can be a technological challenge. Detecting these objects in orbit around Earth’s moon is even more difficult. Optical telescopes are unable to search for small objects hidden in the bright glare of the Moon. However, a new technological application of interplanetary radar pioneered by scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, has successfully located spacecraft orbiting the Moon -- one active, and one dormant. This new technique could assist planners of future Moon missions.
originally posted by: skunkape23
They lost a spacecraft?
That sounds like an 'Erkel' punchline.
"Did I do that???"
originally posted by: TrueBrit
a reply to: TinfoilTP
TinfoilTP,
You really have no idea what you are talking about, clearly.
You want to complain about India? The two most serious polluters are Russia, and the USA. You know what everyone else who appears on a pie chart regarding this situation gets referred to as? Other. Why? Because its a tiny amount, compared to the thousands and thousands of objects that Roscosmos and NASA have put into orbit.
Get some perspective man, seriously.
o find a spacecraft 380 000 km (237 000 miles) away, JPL's team used NASA's 70-meter (230-foot) antenna at NASA's Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex in California to send out a powerful beam of microwaves directed toward the moon.
originally posted by: TrueBrit
a reply to: TinfoilTP
So let me get this absolutely straight.
The US and Russia may do what they want, and India may never do its own research, never gain access to space, all because you do not think they have somehow earned the right to do so, or because it would be a waste of time?
What kind of globalist bull are you trying to sell here? It might have escaped your attention, but this here that we are living in now, is what people used to call the future. It is a time when many, not few nations have access to space and spaceflight technologies. It is a time when more of the human population can be involved in space science than at any time in the history of mankind.
India have had a space program of one sort or another since 1962, their first satellite was launched by the Russians in 1975, and in 1980 lofted their own satellite on board their own rocket for the first time. They have launched Moon and Mars orbiters, and their Mars Orbiter Mission made India the first, so far the only nation to have reached Mars orbit first time, rather than failing and having to have another crack later on.
What is more, the Indians have proven that they have a great aptitude for launching multiple satellites on one rocket, their current record standing at 104 satellites on board one rocket, which is a world record. They smashed their own previous record of twenty at a time, in setting that new high bar.
India is producing science at the moment that other nations, like the US, Russia, and China are all taking advantage of. I think you just need to go and do some reading into the history of Indian involvement in space exploration, preferably without those blinkers on, before you comment again, because all you are doing is showing yourself up.