This is from CNN.

http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/space/02/14/spy.satellite/index.html?eref=rss_us

Officials: U.S. to try to shoot down errant satellite

>From Mike Mount
CNN

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The U.S. military may try within days to shoot
down a failed satellite using a missile launched from a Navy ship,
officials announced Thursday.

 Gen. James Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
told reporters at the Pentagon that the window to accomplish the
mission could begin in three to four days, and remain open for seven
to eight.

While much space trash and debris have safely crashed to Earth after
burning up in the atmosphere on re-entry, authorities said what makes
this 5,000-pound satellite different is the approximately 1,000 pounds
of frozen toxic hydrazine propellant it carries.

Without any intervention, officials believe the satellite would come
down on its own in early March.

If it came down in one piece, nearly half the spacecraft would survive
re-entry and the hydrazine -- heated to a gas -- could spread a toxic
cloud roughly the size of two football fields, Cartwright said.

Hydrazine is similar to chlorine or ammonia in that it affects the
lungs and breathing tissue, the general said.

The option of striking the satellite with a missile launched from an
Aegis cruiser was decided upon by President Bush after consultation
with several government and military officials and aerospace experts,
said Deputy National Security Adviser James Jeffrey.

"After further review of this option and, in particular, consideration
of the question of saving or reducing injury to human life, the
president, on the recommendation of his national and homeland teams,
directed the Department of Defense to carry out the intercept,"
Jeffrey said.

The goal is to hit the satellite just before it enters Earth's
atmosphere and blast it apart so that the hydrazine tank explodes. The
smaller debris would be more likely to burn up in the atmosphere.

NASA Administrator Michael Griffin said there's nothing the military
can do to make the outcome worse.

"If we miss, nothing changes. If we shoot and barely touch it, the
satellite is just barely in orbit" and would still burn up somewhat in
the atmosphere, Griffin said.

"If we shoot and get a direct hit, that's a clean kill and we're in
good shape," he added.

Experts said that with three-quarters of Earth covered in water,
there's a 25 percent chance the satellite's remnants will hit land --
and a 1 percent chance they will hit a populated area.

There will be three Navy ships involved in the operation. The USS Lake
Erie, an Aegis cruiser, will fire the missile, while trajectory
information comes from a second ship. The third ship will be used as a
backup, U.S. Navy officials said.

The Lake Erie has long been used as the platform for the sea-based
missile defense program.

Cartwright said the satellite stopped working within hours of its
launch in December and has not responded to attempts to communicate
with it. He brushed off blog theories that the military wants to shoot
down the satellite with a missile to destroy any classified data it
may have accumulated in its short life, or to prevent other countries
from acquiring the technology.

In January 2007, China used a land-based missile to destroy a
2,200-pound satellite that was orbiting 528 miles above Earth.

But the impact left more than 150,000 pieces of debris floating above
Earth, NASA estimates. The space agency characterizes nearly 2,600
pieces as "large," meaning greater than 4 inches across, which pose a
potential threat to satellites and spacecraft.

China is responsible for 42 percent of all satellite debris in orbit
as of January 1, most of it from that Fengyun-C meteorological
satellite.

NASA has called it the worst satellite breakup in history.


-- 
Mauro Diotallevi
Alcohol and calculus don't mix. Don't drink and derive.
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