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Debris from a Chinese space rocket is crashing toward earth: Report

Debris from a Chinese space rocket is crashing toward earth: Report
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The debris from the Chinese rocket is arranged to crash into the earth for some time for the next few days, with the potential for ruins to land across a large number of worlds.

Part of the March 5 long rocket launched by China on July 24 will make an uncontrolled re -entry around July 31, according to Aerospace Corp, a non -profit organization based in El Segundo, California, who received US funds.

The debris sector may include most of the US, as well as Africa, Australia, Brazil, India and Southeast Asia, according to Aerospace predictions.

The concern for re-entering and the impact was dismissed by China, however, with the media supported by the state said the warning was only the “acid wine” of people who hated the development of the country as space for space.

“The US is out of ways to stop the development of China in the aerospace sector, so the smear and defamation becomes the only thing that remains,” said the Global Times newspaper, quoting Song Zhongping, a television commentator who closely follows the Chinese space program .

US and West media deliberately exaggerate and exaggerate ‘loss’ Chinese rocket debris and the possibility of personal injury caused by rocket debris, clearly with bad intentions, “said the news site based in Shanghai, Guancha .cn, Tuesday.

Booster descendants, which weigh 23 metric tons (25.4 tons), will be part of what critics say is a series of uncontrolled accidents that highlight the risk of increasing space competition in China with the US.

“Because of the uncontrolled nature of his offspring, there is a possibility that it is not zero from the landing of debris that is still alive in a population area-more than 88% of the world’s population that lives under the traces of potential debris re-entering,” Aerospace said Tuesday.

In May 2021, the pieces of other long parade rockets landed in the Indian Ocean, encouraging fears that the Chinese space body had lost control over it.

It is clear that China failed to meet the standards responsible for the debris of their space,” said Nasa Bill Nelson’s administrator that month. “It is very important that China and all countries with extraordinary fate and commercial entities act responsibly and transparently in space to ensure safety, stability, security, and long -term sustainability of space activities.”

The latest launch of China, which sent modules to the State Space Station, including boosters to place space aircraft into orbit. The booster is now “dead” and is beyond the control of the Chinese Space Agency, said Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysics at the Astrophysics Center, operated by Harvard University and the Smithsonian institution.

“The Chinese are right that the best bet is that it will fall in the sea,” he said, even though “there are many inhabitants” in the ranks of the booster rocket.

More debris may fall to earth late this year, when China will launch a long March rocket to space station, McDowell said.

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