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光棍节快到了,大家来看假装情侣吧
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光棍节快到了,大家来看假装情侣吧# Piebridge - 鹊桥
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坠落地点无法预测!
An old German satellite plunged to Earth Saturday evening after languishing
in a dead orbit for more than a decade, but officials do not yet know where
it fell.
The 2.7-ton Roentgen Satellite, or ROSAT, slammed into Earth's atmosphere
sometime between 9:45 p.m. EDT (0145 GMT Sunday) and 10:15 p.m. EDT (0215
GMT Sunday), according to officials at the German Aerospace Center.
"There is currently no confirmation if pieces of debris have reached Earth's
surface," German aerospace officials said in a statement.
While the 21-year-old satellite broke apart as it re-entered Earth's
atmosphere, German aerospace officials estimated that up to 30 pieces
totaling 1.9 tons (1.7 metric tons), consisting mostly of the observatory's
heat-resistant mirrors and ceramic parts, could survive the fiery trip and
reach the surface of the planet.
Based on ROSAT's orbital path, these fragments could be scattered along a
swath of the planet about 50 miles (80 kilometers) wide, German aerospace
officials have said.
The satellite, which weighs 5,348 pounds (2,426 kilograms), was launched
into orbit in June 1990 to study X-ray radiation from stars, comets,
supernovas, nebulas and black holes, among other things. The satellite was
originally designed for an 18-month mission, but it far outlived its
projected lifespan. [Photos of Doomed ROSAT Satellite]
In 1998, the ROSAT's star tracker failed and its X-ray sensors pointed
directly at the sun. This caused irreparable damage to the satellite, and it
was officially decommissioned in February 1999.
The defunct German X-ray observatory was the second satellite to fall
uncontrolled from space within a roughly 30-day period. On Sept. 24, a 6.5-
ton, decommissioned NASA climate satellite, called the Upper Atmosphere
Research Satellite (UARS), plummeted into the Pacific Ocean. The event
sparked a media frenzy around the world, and some pranksters even seized the
opportunity to create hoax videos and images of the satellite's fall.
Mission controllers initially estimated that ROSAT could fall to Earth in
November, but increased solar activity caused the satellite's orbit to decay
faster than originally expected. As the sun's activity ramps up, it heats
up and expands the atmosphere, which creates more drag on satellites in
orbit.
ROSAT's fall from space, and the UARS satellite before it, shone a spotlight
on the growing problem of debris in space.
"One option is we want to be able to catch uncontrolled satellites in the
future," Jan Woerner, head of the executive board of the Deutsches Zentrum f
ür Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR), Germany's space agency, told SPACE.com. "We'
re working on such a mission to catch them, depending on their state, and
have a controlled re-entry or send them to a graveyard, in order to prevent
this situation in the future."
NASA's bus-size UARS satellite was the largest satellite to fall
uncontrolled from orbit since 1979. Skylab, the first American space station
, plummeted to Earth in 1979, and debris from the complex plunged into the
Indian Ocean and onto parts of Australia.
Also in 1979, NASA's Pegasus 2 satellite, which was launched in 1965 to
study micrometeoroids in low-Earth orbit, re-entered the atmosphere
uncontrolled and splashed into the mid-Atlantic Ocean.
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