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Post by swamprat on Dec 13, 2012 18:34:38 GMT -6
North Korea may not have 'full control' of satellite, U.S. official saysBy Barbara Starr There were preliminary signs on Wednesday that North Korea may not be in total control of a satellite less than 24 hours after it was blasted into orbit, a U.S. official told CNN. "There are some initial indications they might not have full control," the official said of the device that was the payload for North Korea's first successful long-range rocket launch. The official, who has access to the latest U.S. assessment, declined to be identified by name due to the sensitive nature of the information. The satellite, described by one U.S. defense official as a rudimentary communications satellite with limited capability, is on a Polar orbit, meaning it is moving between the North and South poles. Since there are issues about control, the United States is not certain the satellite is in a fully stable orbit. "We don't know. We are still trying to figure that out," the U.S. official said. However, he also cautioned the satellite could stay in its relatively low altitude orbit for months before either burning up or falling back to Earth. security.blogs.cnn.com/2012/12/12/north-korea-may-not-have-full-control-of-satellite-u-s-official-says/?hpt=hp_t3
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Post by skywalker on Dec 13, 2012 22:05:04 GMT -6
An unstable satellite?? Alllright!! Time to get my catchers mit out again. ;D
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