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#11
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Rear view mirror?
Dan Luke wrote: "Gig 601XL Builder" wrote: The pilot of a Lan Chile Airbus A340, which was travelling between Santiago, Chile, and Auckland, New Zealand, notified air traffic controllers at Auckland Oceanic Centre after seeing flaming space junk hurtling across the sky just five nautical miles in front of and behind his plane about 10pm last night. How did he see stuff behind him? -- Joe Leikhim K4SAT "The RFI-EMI-GUY"© "Treason doth never prosper: what's the reason? For if it prosper, none dare call it treason." "Follow The Money" ;-P |
#12
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"Dan Luke" wrote in message
... How did he see stuff behind him? -- Dan C-172RG at BFM Would it have come up on TCAS? Crash Lander |
#13
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Not to be picky, but... How was the distance measured?
With a ruler? I don't know how (or whether) the distance was measured, or whether it was calculated after the fact. Jose -- Get high on gasoline: fly an airplane. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#14
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On Mar 28, 2:05 pm, "Maxwell" wrote:
Those things are so fully equipped these days, he might have seen it on his radar, or perhaps a collision avoidance system, hard to say. They may even be able to replay the collision avoidance and radar data now days. I would think some collision avoidance could be targeted aft. It would be interesting to know. Got any airline pilots out there anywhere? In the things I fly you are lucky to have gps, unless you bring your own. I'm not an airline pilot, but I know that TCAS (collision avoidance) only works with transponder equipped traffic. It's unlikely that the burning space junk was so equipped. Something like space junk wouldn't likely show up on the weather radar either. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
#15
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But, five miles = "narrowly missed"????????
For outer space? Yes. Not to be picky, but... How was the distance measured? |
#16
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Google found this report
By Emma O'Brien March 29 (Bloomberg) -- A Lan Airlines SA aircraft flying over the Pacific Ocean on its way to New Zealand came within 40 seconds of being hit by a debris from a falling Russian satellite, the Dominion Post said, citing aviation authorities. The pilot of the Chilean plane, which was traveling to Auckland from Santiago on March 27, alerted Auckland air traffic controllers after he saw a flaming pieces of space junk fall 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) in front of and behind the aircraft, the newspaper said. The material came from a Russian satellite that was being dumped back to earth 12 hours ahead of schedule, according to the Post. Airways New Zealand, which provides air navigation services, was warned a satellite would fall to earth some time on March 28, the newspaper said. New Zealand's Civil Aviation Authority will investigate the incident, the newspaper said, citing communications manager Bill Sommer. Lan Airlines declined to comment on the incident when contacted yesterday, according to the Post. |
#17
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Gig 601XL Builder wrDOTgiaconaATsuddenlink.net wrote:
Pieces of space junk from a Russian satellite coming out of orbit narrowly missed hitting a jetliner over the Pacific Ocean overnight. ""On Christmas eve," said NORAD, "a Soviet Sputnik hit Africa." India, Venezuela. Texas, Kansas. It's falling fast. Peru, too. It keeps coming. It keeps coming. It keeps coming... And now I'm mad about space junk." Matt Roberds |
#18
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Not to be picky, but... How was the distance measured?
With a ruler? :-))) |
#19
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![]() "Gig 601XL Builder" wrDOTgiaconaATsuddenlink.net wrote in message ... http://www.thewest.com.au/default.as...ontentID=24657 Pieces of space junk from a Russian satellite coming out of orbit narrowly missed hitting a jetliner over the Pacific Ocean overnight. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/...ectid=10431449 "However, Nasa said today it was convinced the flaming objects were not from a satellite and space experts said it could have been a meteor." |
#20
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On 2007-03-28, Crash Lander wrote:
Would it have come up on TCAS? Crash Lander Only if they fitted a transponder to the space junk! -- Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. Oolite-Linux: an Elite tribute: http://oolite-linux.berlios.de |
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