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Continuing Kepler's Quest: Assessing Air Force Space Command's Astrodynamics Standards

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Continuing Kepler's Quest: Assessing Air Force Space Command's Astrodynamics Standards - National Research Council, and Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences, and Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board
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In February 2009, the commercial communications satellite Iridium 33 collided with the Russian military communications satellite Cosmos 2251. The collision, which was not the first recorded between two satellites in orbit--but the most recent and alarming--produced thousands of pieces of debris, only a small percentage of which could be tracked by sensors located around the world. In early 2007, China tested a kinetic anti-satellite weapon against one of its own satellites, which also generated substantial amounts of space ...

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Continuing Kepler's Quest: Assessing Air Force Space Command's Astrodynamics Standards 2012, National Academies Press, Washington, D.C.

ISBN-13: 9780309261425

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