« Responder #814 em: Março 29, 2016, 10:39:25 am »
Já foi para o galheiro...

Japan’s newest space telescope goes silent
Japan has lost contact with the newly-launched Hitomi space telescope, and ground observations indicate the satellite has shed debris and may be tumbling in orbit more than 350 miles above Earth.
Ground controllers lost contact with the Hitomi black hole observatory at the start of a planned communications pass around 0740 GMT (3:40 a.m. EDT) Sunday, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency said in a statement.
Shortly before the loss of communications with Hitomi, the U.S. military’s space tracking radars detected five objects in the vicinity of the satellite. The Joint Space Operations Center, the U.S. military command charged with monitoring objects in orbit, said Monday the debris came off the Hitomi spacecraft around 0142 GMT Sunday (9:42 p.m. EDT Saturday).
The Hitomi mission, also known as Astro-H, launched Feb. 17 aboard a Japanese H-2A rocket. The mission was supposed to last at least three years.
Engineers have been unable to determine the health of the satellite since the sudden disruption in communications, JAXA said, although ground controllers received a brief signal from Hitomi.
“While the cause of communication failure is under investigation, JAXA received short signal from the satellite, and is working for recovery,” the space agency said in a statement.
JAXA established an emergency response headquarters to investigate the satellite’s communications failure and attempt to recover the mission.

O resto em:
http://spaceflightnow.com/2016/03/27/japans-newest-space-telescope-goes-silent/