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Rocket carrying French spy satellite lifts off

Beowulf

Golden Member
Rocket carrying French spy satellite lifts off
Satellite can spot text-book sized objects, collect data at night

The Associated Press
Updated: 12:31 p.m. ET Dec. 18, 2004


PARIS - An Ariane rocket lifted off Saturday from a pad in South America to place France?s third military spy satellite into orbit, Arianespace said.

The unmanned craft roared skyward from a launch center in Kourou, French Guyana, at 1:36 p.m. ? the third and last launch of an Ariane-5 this year, the space agency said.

The satellite and six smaller ones were to be placed into orbit about an hour after liftoff ? the first time in 11 years that an Ariane rocket carried as many as seven satellites on a single launch.

The Helios 2A military satellite, the rocket?s main cargo, is to rotate in sun-synchronous orbit around 435 miles above the Earth, Arianespace said.

Among expected functions, the satellite is to monitor possible weapons proliferation, prepare and evaluate military operations and digitally map terrain for cruise missile guidance, the French Defense Ministry said in a statement Friday.

Helios 2A, weighing 4.6 tons, is said to be able to spot objects as small as a textbook anywhere on Earth. Equipped with infrared sensors, it is expected to allow France?s military to gather information at night from space for the first time.

Among its predecessors, Helios 1B, which was launched in 1999, suffered a power problem and the military let it disintegrate in the upper layers of the atmosphere two months ago. The first satellite in the series, Helios 1A, went up in 1995 and is still operating.

Also in the payload Saturday was the Parasol satellite, which is to help study the effect of cloud cover and aerosols on global warming and the greenhouse effect, believed to occur when carbon dioxide emissions trap the sun?s heat in the atmosphere.

Parasol is part of a French-American space observation mission involving six satellites that can study the world?s atmosphere and help give a complete idea of how human activity affects the environment.

The launch marks the 165th Ariane mission since the European launcher first began operating in 1979. Arianespace is the commercial arm of the 13-country European Space Agency.

© 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6731959/
 
Originally posted by: maddogchen
why make public that you are launching a spy satellite? 😕
What intelligence agency on Earth is not going to notice the launch of a huge-assed satellite into space? Hell, if I recall correctly a good portion of the satellites the U.S. launched have been classified as "weather satellites." I'm sure that way back when, over in Lubyanka, the KGB got a good chuckle over that. 😉
 
Like we could have stopped them? We have to fortget this idea that we can keep the rest of the world from developing their own technology, because we can't. We do need to do everthing we can to prevent them from stealing ours though.
 
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