Sir
Is it big enough to house the 747 laser unit?
Amateur astronomers believe they have located the X-37B US military unmanned spaceplane, which was launched into orbit on a classified mission a month ago. Detail on the X-37B's wings. Credit: USAF We now know where, but not why or what. According to the authoritative skygazers' site Heavens-Above, the X-37B is in an orbit …
It didn't disappear. It just may be able to change direction quickly so the people watching it might lose track of it, but that hasn't happened yet. Stealth vehicles have a small radar signature. They're not invisible. Somebody probably just saw it with a telescope.
And no, you didn't say.
so the us are militarising space...
what abour non proliferation agreements?
lest we forget amidst all the concern about N. Korea and Iran, there is only one rogue state that had ever deployed a nucular (lolz) weapon.... twice
I say bollocks to our space nuke totin rednecked overlords
Not all of us over on the other side of the pond are stupid, or okay with the fact that we're the only ones to actually USED nuclear weapons, and then tell others they can't use them. One's current leaders have to understand the mistakes of their predecessors. However, one also needs to understand that the acts of a current individuals predecessors doesn't necessarily reflect the current views of an administration.
The best part is, amateurs can find it! So, it shouldn't be that hard. Unless it has one of those fancy cloaking devices like the Puddle Jumpers in Stargate Atlantis! XD
Though to quote another great merkin - bill maher (actually on the subject of a french election), 'we couldnt get 78% turn out in an election if the vote was between tits and bigger tits and the government was giving away free samples'
(BTW bill you owe me a new kbd and screen for that one :-D)
so all bets are off regarding the NEXT administration, and sadly you just know those people are sittin on their porch, watching russia, biding their time....
The US and the USSR alike militarized space before I was even born (and you as well, judging from your command of the keyboard).
Were you not here to read the news story about how somebody was offering rides on decommissioned once-clandestine Soviet space-gunboats (Almaz) that had been equipped with machine guns? Did you never read about that time in 1985 in which an F-15 Eagle nailed a derelict satellite with a missile designed for the purpose (ASM-135 ASAT), or the rather more recent case wherein a US warship did much the same with an SM-3?
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So just imagine any one of a fleet of these can get to just about anywhere on Earth within, say, 90 minutes. So how long a runway would it need to land?. The options for foreign operations to receive hi-tec supplies with very short notice could be key. Or indeed delivery of other less savoury payloads to anywhere is also possible (although much less palatable). This can either be a prototype of itself or a larger unit, as part of a constellation.
"So just imagine any one of a fleet of these can get to just about anywhere on Earth within, say, 90 minutes. "
Strictly it would be 45 mins as the farthest away site is 1/2 way around the world, which would be a sub-orbital flight. However the easiest orbit to reach is the one slanted to the equator at the same angle as the latitude of the launch site. Other require the Earth to precess under its flight path (multiple orbits. It's a problem in geometry) or high fuel usage burns. Plane change is *very* expensive.
"So how long a runway would it need to land?. The options for foreign operations to receive hi-tec supplies with very short notice could be key. "
Check the spec. Then check weather it needs on the ground hardware to help it line up.
"Or indeed delivery of other less savoury payloads to anywhere is also possible (although much less palatable). This can either be a prototype of itself or a larger unit, as part of a constellation."
It does have a payload bay designed to have standardised packages in it. Before you get *too* carried away look at the *huge* 2 stage booster it's sitting on.
It *looks* like a reusable spaceplane (or rather what the USAF think it should look like) but it *really* isn't. It's basically an update of the X20 Dyansoar concept, without a human pilot on board.
UPS would be the best bet... anyway if you had enough to secured a whole runway you'd have enough kit with you in the first place! I think that plane drops would be cheaper and could return home. This craft cannot return and would be wasted!
I think this is just a reusable satellite chassis, with some pretty sophisticated spy gear on it, once its run out of fuel (or helium for the cameras) down it comes for a refit and relaunch.
I dont ever foresee this performing the single orbit missions that have been hypothesised, there is no point in coming down empty, just to go back up empty, to collect 'something' later. especially since that something would be seen and would not be able to manouver to avoid any hostiles.
I do however see this loitering for 9 months (and avoiding any missles thrown at it..) taking pictures, maybe optical maybe synethetic apature radar, and then returning for a service before refittign and relaunching.
I did notice that it's current orbit passes over Afganistan, Iran and the middle east and pretty much misses most of Russia...
..with the complacent insecurity we've seen in the USA.
So, find a programmer or two on the project, offer them a cruise to somewhere exotic, with a briefcase full of money and a beautiful girl in exchange for the passwords. The guys are probably virgins, and gagging at the prospect.
Security? Botnet, anyone? Next thing you know these little ships will arrive for 'breakfast' at the top of the Freedom Tower.
What we sow, so shall we reap.
What goes up, must come down. Under whose command is anyone's guess.