I'm not really concerned about the end of the world on the 21st. I am worried about North Korea having a 'runaway' satellite, Unha-3, orbiting the
atmosphere. How do we even know it's just a satellite? Couldn't it be a nuclear weapon disguised as a rogue satellite?
Pyongyang says the device, the size of a washing machine, is working and is beaming revolutionary songs to Earth. But US astronomer Jonathan McDowell
says it may be tumbling, and does not yet appear to be transmitting.
It's the size of a washing machine and is beaming revolutionary music. Why revolutionary songs? Are they getting ready for war?
How big does a nuke have to be to cause an Electromagnetic Pulse that could shut down a
country?
What if the reason Mr. Mcdowell say's the satellite is not transmitting is because it's only made to receive and by that I mean it's waiting on the
detonator to transmit.
I'm sure the washing machine size is an estimate so what if it was bigger and it was actually a nuke just waiting for the right orbit over the right
city, state, country at the right time?
These bombs vary in size and are all bigger than a washing machine but some of them weren't much larger so a washing machine size bomb would most
likely create a EMP but how large and how much of an area would it cover?
A lot of questions and I don't know the answers. I just find it alarming there is an object floating around up there and we don't know it's
intentions.
There is even the possibility that this satellite is meant to take out other satellites orbiting the Earth.
Remember the video game trailer for 'Homefront' where North Korea takes over the world? The video at 2:46 shows a satellite doing just what I
mentioned above. Life imitating art?
Is it paranoia, perhaps, but what if it's not?
TheLieWeLive
edit on 20-12-2012 by TheLieWeLive because: cna't splel
I've been wondering about this ever since they launched it and have been taking the term "satellite" for it with nothing more than a grain of sand.
It might just be my untrusting nature, but I think they could very possibly be up to something sinister. The question is though, did they really have
the technology?
You raise one of my largest concerns right now, to be sure. This:
Is what 3.8 Megatons detonated in the low reaches of space looks like. It happened over Johnston Island in 1958 and knocked out some electrical in
Hawaii roughly 900 miles away. So...figure a 900 mile radius? Err...not pretty. I'm not sure how hard it is to make BIG ones, once you master making
anything nuclear. I mean if controlling yield doesn't concern you and just making it go boom in a huge huge way...whatever that means...is literally
the level of technical requirement to being happy? (Which an EMP blast would need little more than that to be workable) Well.... Ouch
Those are the atmospheric and space nuclear detonations conducted in test series...how high they were...and of course, the names and dates to go
research if anyone wants. They each have their tales of screw ups and dramatic effect for EMP.
Originally posted by Myomistress
I've been wondering about this ever since they launched it and have been taking the term "satellite" for it with nothing more than a grain of sand.
It might just be my untrusting nature, but I think they could very possibly be up to something sinister. The question is though, did they really have
the technology?
Maybe they don't have the technology but other countries do and we can't be sure who is trading with who. I have an untrusting nature also so it
could be that or maybe it's the saying 'better to be safe than sorry'.
It doesn't have to be an EMP or a nuke to cause massive destruction.
There are tens of thousands of objects in orbit. One big enough explosion with projectiles flying in the proper directions, without even using any
precise timing, could create a debris field large enough to cause a chain reaction of utter destruction of our orbiting objects. I think of it as the
equivalent of a Korean pipe bomb compared to a military controlled demolition. It wouldn't take much to reach the goal.
Something as simple as this could destroy our communications. (a LOT goes through satellites) It could rain down debris on earth, creating a lot of
devastation, property loss, agricultural damage, fires, etc. There could be weapons of other kinds (ones we don't know about) that are better left in
space due to the radiation or other threats they pose on the surface.
When Iran was able to demonstrate their ability to reach orbit, I worried then just as I am now about this Korean satellite. I would not be surprised
if that was their intent all along.
I noticed those dates being some 50 years ago too. They've gotten better with everything else so it's not farfetched to think that they've could
have bigger results with smaller bombs by now.
I see what you mean. A claymore like effect that would knock out untold communication satellites or maybe even "Star Wars" weaponry that could
already be in orbit since the 80's.
I also wonder if this is why the X37-b spy plane was sent up the same day. I know it was already planned to go up earlier but is it a coincidence it
was delayed and then launched the same day N. Korea launched their missile? I doubt it.
edit on 20-12-2012 by TheLieWeLive because: (no
reason given)
I don't know what that is. I was thinking a outdoor concert or fireworks but there doesn't seem to be any noise?
They have devices that can emit EMP's and you wouldn't even know it until your car rolled to a stop or everything electrical stopped working. It
doesn't have to be a nuclear device to create one.
God damn the rules I don't have much more to say too xmassy to detail but YES..... they absolutely can its a high likelihood that is what is up there
they are uni directional in thought.... it's what I would do in there position
Have you seen this video? It's a Ford Taurus driving through a EMP. The device just emits the EMP within a 50 foot radius. Makes you wonder what
a missile would or could do.