This sounds to me totally made up, but at the insistence of my personal (non-work related) gmail account showing me this link (it is a trusted ally at this point), I’m forwarding on this altogether peculiar news item from Wired:
An American missile-warning satellite has died, more than 22,000 miles up. So now, the U.S. is sending a pair of mini-spacecraft on a top secret operation to investigate, Craig Covault reports for Spaceflight Now. If the mission is successful, analysts say, it’ll have a global impact. Because the same technologies used to investigate a friendly, out-of-service satellite could also be used to help take out an enemy orbiter.
In June 2006, a Delta 2 rocket launched a pair of Darpa spacecraft into geosynchronous orbit. The stated goal of the “MiTex” (Micro-satellite Technology Experiment) project was to have the 225-kilogram ships inspect each other, while twirling around the planet. Equipped with advanced thrusters, batteries and solar panels, the two tiny satellites were meant to be more maneuverable, and longer-lasting, than almost anything else in its class. For two years — as far as we know — the pair did their inspection pas de deux, tens of thousands of miles up.
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ASSOCIATED CONTENT @TMBCHR (Auto-Generated)
- Elections Are Information Warfare
- Christian Spiritual Warfare
- Missiles Make Baby Jesus Cry!
- Info warfare? or Info schmorfare?
- WTF is this statement?
