Sunday, May 23, 2010

What is The X-37B 's Mission?

A rendering of the X-37B, the unmanned successor to the space shuttle that began its secret debut mission last month. NASA/Boeing Phantom Works

Surveillance Is Suspected as Spacecraft’s Main Role -- New York Times

A team of amateur sky watchers has pierced the veil of secrecy surrounding the debut flight of the nation’s first robotic spaceplane, finding clues that suggest the military craft is engaged in the development of spy satellites rather than space weapons, which some experts have suspected but the Pentagon strongly denies.

Last month, the unmanned successor to the space shuttle blasted off from Florida on its debut mission but attracted little public notice because no one knew where it was going or what it was doing. The spaceship, known as the X-37B, was shrouded in operational secrecy, even as civilian specialists reported that it might go on mysterious errands for as long as nine months before zooming back to earth and touching down on a California runway.

Read more ....

My Comment: You have to wonder what it can do that a regular satellite cannot. Surveillance can easily be done by a regular conventional spy satellite .... my gut tells me that there is more to this story than what is being told.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

What can this do that a regular satellite cannot? A ton of things. It can be launched on demand, it can be brought back to earth and loaded with a different payload, it can test satellite sensors forgoing the need for expensive demonstration satellites that might end up failing anyways, it can be re tasked as many times as necessary and then brought back to earth and refueled when necessary. It can do a million things that a standard satellite cannot..it is 100 times for flexible.