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![]() "Donald Ratsch" wrote in message . .. "Jim Oberg" wrote in message ... 23 August 2007 Missile Launch to Support Boost Phase Data Collection Experiment Successfully Completed Lt. Gen. Henry "Trey" Obering III, Missile Defense Agency director, announced today the successful execution of an important exercise designed to collect data on a boosting long-range target missile by the Near Field Infrared Experiment (NFIRE) research satellite. A modified Minuteman II booster vehicle was launched today from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. at approximately 1:30 a.m. PDT (4:30 am EDT) and was successfully tracked by the NFIRE satellite. The NFIRE satellite has been in orbit since it was launched from NASA's Wallops Island, Va. space launch facility on April 24, 2007. This exercise provided an opportunity for the NFIRE satellite to collect high and low resolution images of a boosting rocket which will improve understanding of missile exhaust plume observations and plume-to-rocket body discrimination. Data from the NFIRE satellite was downlinked to the Missile Defense Space Experimentation Center (MDSEC) at the Missile Defense Integration & Operations Center (MDIOC) at Schriever AFB, Colo. The NFIRE exercise campaign supports the design and development of space-based sensors like the Space Tracking and Surveillance System (STSS) currently under development as well as design and development of boost phase interceptor sensors. Program officials will continue to evaluate system performance based upon telemetry and other data obtained during the exercise. The Missile Defense Agency will use this data to validate and update models and simulations that are fundamental to missile defense technologies. General Dynamics is the system integrator for the NFIRE mission, and designed and manufactured the satellite. The Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) and Science Applications International Corp. provided the primary payload, the Track Sensor Payload, and Orbital Sciences Corp. provided the booster rocket system. The secondary payload for conducting crosslink satellite-to-satellite and satellite-to-ground communication experiments is the Laser Communication Terminal built by Tesat-Spacecom of Germany. News media point of contact is Rick Lehner, Missile Defense Agency, at (703) 697-8997 or For the atheists here, you are in for a surprise http://www.godtube.com/view_video.ph...80cbfd9b0fecd3 This is technically interesting. However. What man of destructive intent would build and use expensive spectacular unreliable noisy rockets to throw his destructive devices over here, when so many quiet and reliable ways exist to do it? ?? Cheers -- Martha Adams [sci.space.policy 2007 Dec 30] |
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