UPDATE on Watch Sex Paradise OnlineJan. 9, 2023 at 4:15 p.m. ET: NASA said the Defense Department confirmed the defunct Earth Radiation Budget Satellite reentered the atmosphereover the Bering Sea at 11:04 p.m. ET Sunday, Jan. 8, 2023. No injuries or property damage are known at this time.
A vintage 1980s satellite is about to make a comeback, but not in the way that Zoomers have treasured acid-wash mom jeans.
A dead 5,400-pound piece of NASA equipment will soon re-enter the atmosphere after nearly four decades of orbiting Earth. Most of the spacecraft will be incinerated, according to the space agency, but some bits will likely crash to Earth or drop in an ocean.
When it will return depends on whom you ask. The U.S. military has predicted it will fall at 6:40 p.m. ET Sunday, Jan. 8, 2023, give or take 17 hours. But the estimate by Aerospace Corporation, a federally funded nonprofit organization that has been tracking the satellite, puts the crash later at 10:49 p.m. Monday, Jan. 9, give or take 13 hours. Where it could hit is similarly uncertain at this point.
"The risk of harm coming to anyone on Earth is very low," NASA officials said in a statement Friday evening, "approximately 1 in 9,400."
Want more scienceand tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newslettertoday.
NASA launched the Earth Radiation Budget Satellite, a study of how Earth absorbed and radiated the sun’s energy, on the Space Shuttle Challenger in 1984. Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, was the astronaut who released it, using the shuttle’s robotic arm. Though the experiment was intended to last two years, the satellite, aka ERBS, continued measuring ozone, water vapor, nitrogen dioxide, and aerosols until its retirement in 2005.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The plummeting space junk will follow four recent high-profile crashes of Chinese equipment that have drawn intense global scrutiny because they were intentionally left out of control and could hurt people with a risk well above commonly accepted levels. The military-run space program also did not communicate any information or warnings prior to the incidents.
No international laws dictate how to deal with space wreckage, but the Space Liability Convention of 1972 did call for states to bear responsibility if something bad happens. When the Kosmos 954 satellite fell and spread radioactive material in Canada in 1977, the Soviet Union was required to address the damage. It is the only claim that has been filed under the convention.
Listen to the eerie sounds of Mars recorded by a NASA roverUnicorn macarons are a thing now, and Instagrammers are losing itThese simple badges are helping social media users talk about mental illness'How I Met Your Mother' writer gives '70s sitcom reboot a personal twistYou can take the subway, but you can't hide from Donald Trump's faceThis Albert Einstein robot is here to help kids learn scienceFacebook brings in a new head of news partnershipsLondon police stop to help 'collapsed person,' get an odd surpriseCES 2017: SwagSurf is like a hoverboard for the oceanReview roundComing soon to a railway station near you: A big, fat Indian weddingAmazon, FreshDirect will start accepting food stampsThe most dadTrivial Pursuit may have gone a bit too hard on the 'find and replace' functionHere are 25 speedruns worth watching this weekWoman discovers sneaky seal hiding in her back gardenAll NYC subways stations will finally have WiHere's what the most expensive headphones in the world sound likeWhy 'Hidden Figures' — and its unsung heroes — is the ultimate NASA storyPug weirdly doesn't get this human game that aims to throw a pie in its face 5 new Lyft features we are looking forward to Uber finally, finally adds tipping Bitcoin hasn't hit $500K, so now John McAfee has to eat his own...well, just click Cloudflare goes down, and takes the internet's security blanket with it Watch Hulu's Freestyle Love Supreme doc, then check out the TV series Steve Bannon just fat New emoji in iOS 14 include ninja and pinched fingers Coconut oil is not a magical health food after all Finally, you can buy this giant Frankenstein of a sex toy Want 83 years worth of free Netflix? Beat the high score on 'The Old Guard' game. Tyra Banks' son has mastered the art of 'smizing' in his first Instagram pic QAnon content is no longer welcome on Twitter. Cue the conspiracy theories. Fitbit sponsors Timberwolves, becomes NBA's first official wearable 11 adorable twins to follow on Instagram if you can't get enough of Beyoncé's bey Marco Rubio's attempt to hug Ivanka Trump is peak awkward Taco Bell confirms the menu changes are unfortunately real Trump praised himself for the Panama Canal and the internet cringed Seth Rogen slipped into Donald Trump Jr.'s DMs to ask for his dad to resign Lyft rides will come with plastic partition between you and driver How to set up parental controls on Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Hulu
2.2023s , 10133.5390625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Sex Paradise Online】,Steady Information Network