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received a notice that the space telescope and
Cosmos 1805 would miss each other by just 700 feet. The mission
team monitored the situation over the next day and it became clear
that the two spacecraft, traveling in different orbits, would zip through
the same point in space within 30 milliseconds of one another, NASA
officials said."My immediate reaction was, 'Whoa, this is different from
anything we've seen before!'" NASA's Fermi project scientist Julie McEnery
said in a statement.The Russian space junk was travelling at a speed
of 27,000 miles per hour in relation to Fermi. If it had
smashed into the space telescope the explosion of the two spacecraft would
have released "as much energy as two and a half tons of
explosives," NASA officials said"It was clear we had to be ready to
move Fermi out of the way, and that's when I alerted our
Flight Dynamics Team that we were planning a maneuver," McEnery added.After
making those calculations, scientists started planning to fire Fermi's thrusters
specifically designed to move the satellite out of the way if these
situations arise."It's similar to forecasting rain at a specific time and
place a week in advance," Eric Stoneking, the attitude control lead engineer
for Fermi at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center said of predicting these
kinds of impacts in a statement. "As the date approaches, uncertainties
in the prediction decrease and the initial picture may change dramatically."The
two sp
ate for younger girls, even though physicians groups
insist that it is.In Wednesday's filing, the Justice Department said Korman
exceeded his authority and that his decision should be suspended while that
appeal is under way, meaning only Plan B One-Step would appear on
drugstore shelves until the case is finally settled. If Korman's order isn't
suspended during the appeals process, the result would be "substantial market
confusion, harming FDA's and the public's interest" as drugstores receive
conflicting orders about who's allowed to buy what, the Justice Department
concluded.Rather than take matters into his own hands, the Justice Department
argued to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that Korman should
have ordered the FDA to reconsider its options for regulating emergency
contraception. The court cannot overturn the rules and processes that federal
agencies must follow "by instead mandating a particular substantive outcome,"
the appeal states.The FDA actually had been poised to lift all age
limits and let Plan B sell over the counter in late 2011,
when Kathleen Sebelius overruled her own scientists. Sebelius said some
girls as young as 11 were physically capable of bearing children but
shouldn't be able to buy the pregnancy-preventing pill on their own.Sebelius'
move was unprecedented, and Korman had blasted it as election-year politics
-- meaning he was overruling not just a government agency but a
Cabinet secretary.More than
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e Syrians determine their own fate, so arming the opposition is
more palatable than direct U.S. intervention.The administration announced
last week that it believes Assad has used chemical weapons but said
the intelligence wasn't clear enough to be certain that the regime has
crossed President Barack Obama's announced "red line" of definite chemical
weapons use that he said would have "enormous consequences" for Assad's
government.Some senior leaders, including Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are skeptical about the wisdom of
providing arms to such a broad and complex mix of opposition groups.
But officials say there is a growing realization that, under increasing
pressure from Congress and other allied nations, the U.S. might soon have
to do more for the Free Syrian Army.The two-year civil war has
left an estimated 70,000 people dead and hundreds of thousands of refugees.High-level
meetings on the latest developments in the issue have been going on
all week, including one between Dempsey and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel,
who just returned from the Mideast.According to a U.S. official and a
U.N. diplomat, intelligence agencies are looking into allegations that chemical
weapons were used in Syria after the two March 19 attacks that
U.S., British, French and Qatari officials have referred to. They provided
no details on the new alleged attacks.This emerging shift within the administration
comes even as Assad a
NASA's $690 million Fermi space telescope was nearly hit by the dead
Russian spy satellite Cosmos 1805 on April 3, 2013. This NASA graphic
depicts the orbital paths of the two spacecraft.NASA's Goddard Space Flight
CenterArtist's illustration of NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope.NASAThis
NASA graphic depicts the amount of space junk currently orbiting Earth.
The debris field is based on data from NASA's Orbital Debris Program
Office. Image released on May 1, 2013.NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/JSCA
high-tech NASA telescope in orbit escaped a potentially disastrous collision
with a Soviet-era Russian spy satellite last year in a close call
that highlights the growing threat of orbital debris around Earth.NASA's
$690 million Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope which studies the most powerful
explosions in the universe narrowly avoided a direct hit with the
defunct 1.5-ton Russian reconnaissance satellite Cosmos 1805 on April 3,
2012, space agency officials announced Tuesday, April 30. The potential
space collision was avoided when engineers commanded Fermi to fire its thrusters
in a critical dodging maneuver to move out of harm's way.- NASA's
Fermi project scientist Julie McEneryNASA created a video of Fermi's near
miss with space junk to illustrate how high the risk of a
space collision really was. [Space Junk Photos & Cleanup Concepts]Fermi
mission scientists first learned of the space collision threat on March
29, 2012 when they
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