Unlike its predecessor, the Hayabusa2 spacecraft will not burn up in Earths atmosphere. Instead, it will jettison the samples once at Earth, where theyre expected to land in the South Australian desert (JAXA is currently negotiating with the Aussie government to iron out some important details, including permits to retrieve the re-entry capsule in the restricted Woomera territory).
grubstake said:Standby for incoming (this time next year)!
Japan's Asteroid Probe Is Finally Returning To Earth With Its Precious Cargo:
https://www.gizmodo.com.au/2019/11/...y-returning-to-earth-with-its-precious-cargo/
Unlike its predecessor, the Hayabusa2 spacecraft will not burn up in Earths atmosphere. Instead, it will jettison the samples once at Earth, where theyre expected to land in the South Australian desert (JAXA is currently negotiating with the Aussie government to iron out some important details, including permits to retrieve the re-entry capsule in the restricted Woomera territory).
Manpa said:There is a series on Apple TV+ which may interest some of you, it is titled, For All Mankind, it is about the US space race against the Russians with the twist being the US is second to the moon.
It features historic footage of the Saturn rockets and the Apollo launches etc.
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