NPR: U.S. Spy Satellite Reportedly 'Write Off' After Failing To Reach Orbit
A top-secret multi-billion dollar U.S. spy satellite launched from Cape Canaveral on Sunday reportedly failed to separate from the upper stage of its SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and never reached orbit.
The technology website Ars Technica cites one source as saying the "the payload fell back to Earth along with the spent upper stage of the Falcon 9 rocket."
The satellite, code-named Zuma, appears to be "a write-off," according to a source quoted by Reuters.
Read more ....
More News On A Top Secret U.S. Spy Satellite Being Lost After Launch
It’s not official, but sources say the secretive Zuma satellite was lost -- Ars Technica
US spy satellite believed lost after SpaceX launch -- CNET
U.S. Spy Satellite Believed Lost After SpaceX Mission Fails -- WSJ
SpaceX's Mysterious Zuma Mission Might Not Have Been so Successful After All -- Fortune
A highly classified US spy satellite is missing due to a SpaceX mission failure -- Business Insider
An expensive, highly classified US spy satellite is believed destroyed after SpaceX launch -- The Week Magazine
Did Something Happen to Secret Zuma Spacecraft After SpaceX Launch? -- Space.com
Did Elon Musk Lose Secret US Government Satellite? SpaceX Zuma May Have Failed to Reach Orbit -- Newsweek
Did SpaceX's secret Zuma mission actually fail? -- The Verge
2 comments:
It didn't fail.. happened before. RR in the 80s.. failed launch and reported loss, but amateur astronomers found it right where it should be.
We are not supposed to know. That is all.
Media jump'n to conclusions or peddling the party line. I don't buy it. SX sure is going ahead with its planned launches.
Post a Comment