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View Full Version : Sat. US 193 info and aerial projectory


AgilisMerlin
02-18-2008, 09:53 PM
http://www.alien-earth.org/forum/message.php?message=11503&mpage=1&showdate=2/16/08

what it is and here is link - orbit

so when they blow it up, you can see if it is over your home state....

http://www.n2yo.com/?s=29651

Deep Impact will rendezvous with the comet TT on July 4, 2005. We will have five months to pour over the numbers. Hopefully, we will know the megatons needed for our last shot with Holmes. We plan to launch December 14th using a Boeing Delta 7920 with the launch name USA 193 (NROL-21) carrying the nuclear payload. As it stands, if we can launch before December 2007, we will have 9 months before intercept, and 16 months for the answer.

thwart
02-18-2008, 10:01 PM
Man, I thought things around here were a little "out there"...

rwsaunders
02-18-2008, 10:05 PM
Thanks AM.

AgilisMerlin
02-18-2008, 10:09 PM
dreading the fact:

supposed missile impact over portland seattle are:

http://disclose.tv/action/viewvideo/2971/Secret_Space_2___The_Intro/

Louis
02-18-2008, 10:16 PM
so when they blow it up, you can see if it is over your home state....

http://www.n2yo.com/?s=29651

Cool links for geeks.

One thing is somewhat reassuring: When I took the lat-long coordinates which the n2yo associated with my IP address and plugged them into TerraServer they were off by about 20 miles. It would have been pretty scary if the thing came up with a view of my subdivision...

AgilisMerlin
02-18-2008, 10:26 PM
part 4

http://youtube.com/watch?v=PQr4Ynq1Blo&feature=related

part 6

http://youtube.com/watch?v=hgAh8vjz38U&feature=related

part 7

http://youtube.com/watch?v=lCsSnDdCCLA&feature=related

part 8

http://youtube.com/watch?v=am81_veSOto&feature=related

part 9

http://youtube.com/watch?v=2mYaxQxbZY0&feature=related

part 10/11

http://youtube.com/watch?v=jr7ZAJzrCiY&feature=related

http://youtube.com/watch?v=XtjAu2p7YZ8

new satelite info:

http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/story_generic.jsp?channel=awst&id=news/aw020408p2.xml&headline=Falling%20Radar%20Satellite%20Adds%20to%2 0NRO%20Troubles

Viper
02-18-2008, 11:32 PM
agilis merlin = nucking futs with UFOs.
viper = watches all of the UFO movies he posts.

I dedicate this to agilis merlin and all those...who believe:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qi9sLkyhhlE






.

Louis
02-20-2008, 10:49 PM
They say that they think they got it. Will take a while to track the debris and figure out exactly what happened.

Viper
02-20-2008, 10:51 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/space/02/20/satellite.shootdown/index.html

Viper
02-20-2008, 10:56 PM
They say that they think they got it. Will take a while to track the debris and figure out exactly what happened.

True and now it is (or it should be) an eye opener for the world; there is now sh*t in space which can and will fall down. Space is now becoming a dumpster for garbage. I imagine it will take a massive tragedy before the world wakes up. Could you imagine a piece of metal the size of bottle cap, piercing the hull of a Space Shuttle, Space Station or a satellite causing it to fall down before we can do anything about it? Or how about the Chinese or Russians? Who's to say they even keep track of their satellites?

It is a huge concern. The stuff we send and leave up there.

AgilisMerlin
02-21-2008, 07:44 AM
this is such a nice site.............

check out your longitude and latitudes........ yo


good stuff........

http://heavens-above.com/

http://heavens-above.com/orbitheightplot.aspx?Width=600&Height=400&satid=29651

http://heavens-above.com/usa193.aspx?lat=0&lng=0&loc=Unspecified&alt=0&tz=CET :D

rwsaunders
02-21-2008, 08:27 AM
That looks like a graph charting the performance of US banking stocks.

Birddog
02-21-2008, 08:44 AM
May be of interest. Snipped from the Daily Oklahoman

In the past 40 years, about 12 million pounds of space junk have survived re-entry into Earth's atmosphere, according to the Center for Orbital and Re-entry Debris Studies.

Tulsa woman's a one-hit wonder


Staff Writer
TULSA — Lottie Williams might not be one in a trillion, but scientists believe she's at least one in a million.

While some might be concerned with falling space debris, Williams is the only person on record ever hit by any.

Williams, a Tulsa postal worker who was unhurt when she was struck on the shoulder in 1997 by a piece of space debris, said she would keep her eye to the sky while the military tried to shoot down a dying and potentially deadly U.S. spy satellite. Officials said a missile successfully struck it Wednesday night.

In the past 40 years, about 12 million pounds of space junk have survived re-entry into Earth's atmosphere, according to the Center for Orbital and Re-entry Debris Studies.

The reason space junk doesn't regularly hit people is simple: About 70 percent of the Earth's surface is water.

And on average, there are about 130 people per square mile of land, but people don't take up a lot of room. Far more than 99.9 percent of land is unoccupied by a person at any given time, according to researcher Alex de Sherbinin of Columbia University.

No one place is more prone to space junk than others. Where satellites fall depends on their particular orbit.

The orbital debris center that studies the issue puts the odds of anyone being hurt by a piece of space junk at one in a trillion, saying you are far more likely to get hit by lightning.

Using Columbia University's population density maps, Jonathan McDowell, who runs Jonathan's Space Report, calculated that at the highest possible risk, there's a 1-in-10,000 chance that the dead satellite could hit a person. However, it's probably closer to one in a million, McDowell said.

‘It startled me'
Williams is comforted to know the debris was supposed to come down over the Pacific Ocean. But when Williams was hit with debris in 1997 from a piece of a Delta II rocket, it was not supposed to fall in Oklahoma, either.

Williams was hit with a lightweight piece of debris while walking at O'Brien Park in Tulsa about 3:30 a.m.

She said she was with a group of retired people. The group saw what they thought were falling stars, but later Williams learned it was debris re-entering the atmosphere, she said.

"It startled me,” she said.

"It was real dark. I thought it was somebody behind me. I didn't know what it was. It was bothering me real bad, so I kicked it into the light and saw it was burned.”

Williams, who is a fan of science fiction movies, got gloves and picked up the debris. She and the others looked at it in the light of car headlights.

"The lady that was with me thought it was a piece of a space ship; another man thought it was a piece of an airplane,” Williams said.

Williams took the lightweight metal home, but was afraid to have it in the house. So, she put it in the garage.

"I didn't know what it was, or if it had toxic gases in it or what,” Williams said.

"They don't really know if there's life out there or not, you know.”

After calling her local library, Williams finally got in touch with someone at the National Weather Service who said a rocket had re-entered the Earth's atmosphere, but it was not thought to have survived re-entry. Williams said NASA didn't confirm that the debris was from a rocket until 2001.

She still has the piece of debris, hidden away.

A few years ago, her home was broken into and robbers broke the debris but left it at the home.

"People don't know what it is, I think. It just looks like trash,” she said.

"I don't tell anyone where it is now. I have it in a very safe place.”

Contributing: The Associated Press

handsomerob
02-21-2008, 09:17 AM
...Williams was hit with a lightweight piece of debris while walking at O'Brien Park in Tulsa about 3:30 a.m.

She said she was with a group of retired people.

WTH? Who walks in the park at 3:30am with a group of retired people? Was there a "special" swimming pool with a cocoon in it nearby?

Birddog
02-21-2008, 10:00 AM
WTH? Who walks in the park at 3:30am with a group of retired people? Was there a "special" swimming pool with a cocoon in it nearby?
Very funny, I'm still chuckling. When I first read the piece that caught my attention too. I just figured it was probably a typo.

Birddig