
A bunch of new details emerged overnight about the planned shootdown of a dying spy satellite.
In the works since January. "The order to launch the crash program came Jan. 4... [with]
a final go-ahead decision by President Bush this week," the AP reports.
Giant golf ball deployed. CNN says that "a floating X-band radar has to be modified to track the satellite's trajectory." That would be the massive -- and massively controversial -- Sea-Based X-Band Radar. The$815 million, 28-story, orb-like contraption has the ability, in theory, to tell which way a baseball is spinning -- from 3,000 miles away. But it's also proven to susceptible to the elements and high seas. The thing has been in and out of the repair shop for years.
Big bucks. "The attempt by the U.S. Navy to use an anti-missile missile to shoot down a potentially hazardous satellite will cost between $40 million and $60 million, Pentagon officials told CNN. "The missile alone costs almost $10 million."
Your chances of being hit by the falling satellite: one in a trillion. "Compared with, for example, a one in 1.4 million chance of being hit by lightning in the United States," the Discovery Channel notes.
FEMA to the rescue? "With an eye to the possibility that the missile effort will fail, the government has placed six rescue teams across the country to be prepared to act if the satellite hits the United States," according to the AP.
Old news for NASA chief?
Some were surprised to see NASA head honcho Michael Griffin helping plan this operation. They shouldn't be. Not only does he have to worry about what happens to the Shuttle and the Space Station. But he was "deputy for technology at the Strategic Defense Initiative
Organization and worked on missile defense systems from 1986 to 1991."
Diplomatic action. According to the Washington Post,
"the State Department sent cables to all embassies yesterday instructing diplomats to explain to foreign governments how the upcoming attempt to shoot down an out-of-control spy satellite is different from China's destruction of one of its orbiting satellites early last year."
Do or die for missile defense? The shootdown "carries opportunity, but also potential embarrassment, for the administration and advocates of its missile defense program," notes the* NYT*.
(Big ups: AT)
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- Inside America's Satellite-Killing Missile
- Skeptical About the Rogue Spy Sat 'Shot'
- Rogue Spy Sat, Sketched
- Pentagon Unveils Rogue Spy Sat Shoot-Down Plan
- Pentagon to Shoot Down Rogue Satellite
- U.S. May Shoot Down Errant Satellite
- Falling Spy Sat: Don't Panic
- Spy Satellite Will Plummet to Earth
- How China Loses the Coming Space War (Pt. 1)
- How China Loses the Coming Space War (Pt. 2)
- How China Loses the Coming Space War (Pt. 3)
- Ukraine Big: We Can Spot Your Sats, Control Space
- How to Blow Up a Satellite
- "Autonomous" Mini-Spacecraft Team up to Replace Big Sats
- Video: Double Hit for Missile Interceptors
- Missile Defense's Tight Fit
- Missile Defense: Ready Now, or Ready Never?