January 04, 2020
If the US military wanted to quell concerns
Satellites are crucial to the functioning of national economies as well as military operations, and the United States, China and Russia are all thinking about ways to defend them against attack.Some think it might be a space-based bomber that could strike objectives on Earth at a moment&Wholesale floor insulation39;s notice. So I can't imagine that they would be doing a lot of manoeuvring," Samson said."
No doubt they are also looking at ways to attack
their adversaries' satellites.com.Others suspect it is a potential "killer
satellite," capable of destroying or damaging enemy satellites."Maybe it's in
their interest to keep people guessing.1 meters) long and with a nearly 15-foot
wingspan, the X-37 B was blasted into low Earth orbit atop a rocket. (Photo: AP)
Washington: After a nearly two-year sojourn in space, the US military drone X-37
B is back on Earth, fuelling wild ideas about its mystery mission."
It has very
little manoeuvre capability in orbit, and it can't reach high altitudes, only
low Earth orbit," he said in an email.Looking like a small version of an old
NASA space shuttle, the craft touched down on Sunday in Florida, ending a
718-day voyage around the Earth, the US Air Force announced.Or perhaps it is a
super spy plane, orbiting Earth to keep watch on enemy territory as
needed.Moreover, the X-37 B would not be very manoeuvrable once in space,
because its only source of power are solar panels."Generally speaking, to
manoeuvre up in orbit requires a tremendous amount of fuel."The X-37 B's fourth
flight was spotted six days after its launch in 2015 by a network of amateur
satellite trackers, according to the website Spaceflight101.But many experts
doubt that the X-37 B is the prototype for a true weapon of war or
espionage.Since its first flight in 2010, it has sparked all kinds of
speculation about its real purpose.Mark Gubrud, a physicist and expert on
military space technologies at the University of North Carolina, says the idea
that it is a manoeuvrable spy satellite doesn't make much sense either.
Just
under 30 feet (9.Fears that the world is on the brink of an arms race in space
is behind some of those theories."The X-37 is the size of a pick-up truck -- it
would be difficult to have an effective weapon on board," says Victoria Samson,
an expert with the Secure World Foundation, an advocate of sustainable
development in space.Rocketdyne, a US company, announced that on the latest
flight, it tested an ionic thruster used by satellites to move in space.They
think it is being used to test sensors and equipment in space that can then be
brought to the ground to see how they have performed.
The X-37B Orbital Test
Vehicle at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California.In reality, experts today think
the X-37 is more likely a test bed rather than a potential weapon, just as the
Air Force said it was in one of its few public statements about the system.It
disappeared for several months in 2015 following a change in orbit, and again in
February 2017 after another manoeuvre, but was later found again, the website
said.In 2015, the mysterious behaviour of a Russian satellite fuelled
speculation that Moscow was developing attack satellites capable of manoeuvring
in space to zero in on other satellites.Since its first flight in 2010, it has
sparked # all kinds of speculation about its real purpose."
If the US military
wanted to quell concerns, they could," simply by putting out more information
about the X-37 B, said Samson. But many experts doubt that the X-37 B is the
prototype for a true weapon of war or espionage."If you want to make a stealthy,
manoeuvring satellite, you will not weigh it down with wings and landing gear
and make it so visible from Earth that even amateurs are able to track it
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