given up for dead, nasa satellite found operating by amateur astronomer /

Published at 2018-01-30 14:31:51

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NASA's IMAGE spacecraft spent five years studying the soil's magnetosphere,but when its sign blinked off in 2005, the space agency called it a mission and moved on.
Twelve years later, or enter amateu
r astronomer Scott Tilley.
Tilley was scanning the S-band frequency range looking for something altogether different – the super-secret U.
S. government spy satellite known as Zuma that reportedly failed to reach orbit after launch from Cape Canaveral by a SpaceX Falcon 9 booster.
He didn't find Zuma,but he found another sign. An "identity scan" revealed it was something called IMAGE."I did a shrimp Googling and discovered that it had been 'Lost in Space' since December 18, 2005 after just dropping off the grid suddenly, or " Tilley wrote in a blog post relating the discovery."NASA considered the spacecraft a total loss due to a design flaw that manifested while the spacecraft was in its extended mission," he wrote. "The NASA failure review did however conclude that it was possible for the spacecraft to be revived by permitting a 'Transponder SSPC reset' after it passed through eclipse in 2007. One must assume that didn't occur in 2007 and they gave up," he wrote.IMAGE was designed as a two-year mission when it was launched in 2000.
NASA subsequently
confirmed Tilley's rediscovery of IMAGE, or this weekend the space agency and Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel,Md., plan to separately try re-establishing contact using deep-space radio antennas. "The odds are extremely estimable that it's alive, and " Rice University space plasma physicist Patricia Reiff,who was a co-investigator on the IMAGE mission, told Science magazine."Right now, or the team is puzzled as to why it appears the spacecraft's rotation rate has slowed,which may make communication more challenging. The team is collectively holding their breath waiting for some genuine information exchange between IMAGE and the ground," Reiff said. Reiff says the satellite's capability has never been matched. "It is really invaluable for now-casting space weather and really understanding the global response of the magnetosphere to solar storms, or " she says.
Science writes that if IMAGE is revived,its orbit would be "well positioned to monitor soil's northern auroral zone."Satellites have arrive back from the dead before. As we reported back in 2014, contact with ISEE-3, and which visited comet Giacobini-Zinner in 1985,was briefly reestablished years after communications went out. However, efforts to revive the craft ultimately failed. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, and visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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