Anonymous ID: 634dab April 3, 2021, 12:24 p.m. No.75069   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5072 >>5096 >>5106 >>5124 >>5149 >>5166 >>5188

lmtribune.com

SpaceX debris lands in Ephrata, WA

Associated Press

 

EPHRATA, Wash. — A piece of burning rocket debris seen streaking across the Pacific Northwest sky last week crashed on a farm in eastern Washington state, authorities said.

 

After the March 25 event, a farmer discovered a nearly intact piece of rocket in a private field, The Tri-City Herald reported.

 

The approximately 5-foot composite-overwrapped pressure vessel used for storing helium left a nearly 4-inch dent in the ground, Grant County sheriff’s spokesman Kyle Foreman said. No one was hurt, he said.

 

The National Weather Service in Seattle has said the widely reported bright objects in the sky on March 25 were remnants of the second stage of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket leaving comet-like trails as they burned up upon reentry to the Earth’s atmosphere.

 

The farmer, who authorities said didn’t want to be identified, suspected the debris may have come from the rocket and left a message with the sheriff’s office over the weekend, Foreman said. Deputies responded Monday and contacted SpaceX officials. SpaceX confirmed it was part of the rocket and has since retrieved it, Foreman said.

 

The Falcon 9 is a reusable two-stage rocket designed by SpaceX to transport people and payloads into the Earth’s orbit and beyond, according to the SpaceX website. It says there have been 111 launches and 71 landings.

 

https://lmtribune.com/northwest/spacex-debris-lands-in-ephrata/article_6a75ebba-0437-5b41-b7c6-1153c8841d53.html

 

https://twitter.com/GrantCoSheriff/status/1378031863785263106?s=20

Anonymous ID: 634dab April 3, 2021, 2:14 p.m. No.75096   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5106 >>5124 >>5149 >>5166 >>5188

>>75069

Reminder

Cosmos 954 and the International Law of Satellite Accidents

Alexander F. Cohen

Yale Journal of International Law

Vol. 10:78, 1984

 

"From the events leading up to and following the crash of Cosmos 954, four governing norms emerged:

(1) A state that becomes aware that one of its satellites will crash has the duty to forewarn a state that is in danger;

(2) The state whose satellite has crashed in the territory of another state has the duty to provide that state with information (regarding the specifications of that satellite) to enable the endangered state to assess the dangers and act to counter them;

(3) Special rules govern the duty to clean up the remains of a state's satellite that has crashed in another state's territory; and

(4) The state whose satellite has crashed has the duty to compensate a state injured as a result of the crash."

 

"The joint U.S. Canadian cleanup operation that resulted from this exchange, dubbed "Operation Morning Light," cost Canada nearly C$14 million, while the U.S. spent some U.S. $2.2.5 million. Canada billed the U.S.S.R. for C$6 million of its outlay on January 23, 1979, but did not seek reimbursement for the U.S. expenditure. The U.S.S.R. paid C$3 million to Canada on April 2, 1981, "in full and final settlement of all matters connected with the disintegration of the Soviet satellite 'Cosmos 954' in January 1978.''"

 

https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1316&context=yjil