COLLECTIVE MADNESS


“Soft despotism is a term coined by Alexis de Tocqueville describing the state into which a country overrun by "a network of small complicated rules" might degrade. Soft despotism is different from despotism (also called 'hard despotism') in the sense that it is not obvious to the people."

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Amazing satellite photo of Korean Rocket launch from Digital Globe

Digital Globe Imagery

Click the photo for a higher clarity view.

Many years ago I worked on an over the horizon radar system monitoring Soviet missile launches. We used to get excited looking at phosphorescent spikes on a radar screen, which represented real time missile launches from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome or Tyuratam .

This is a technological and photographic coup.

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North Korean rocket launch caught on film

Guardian

A striking satellite image released yesterday shows the moment North Korea launched a long-range rocket on Sunday in defiance of international pressure.

The image was taken from an altitude of 308 miles (496km) by the WorldView-1 satellite moments after the rocket blasted off at 11.10am local time.

North Korea's official news agency said the Taepodong-2 rocket placed a satellite in orbit that is now broadcasting revolutionary songs. The Pentagon claimed the launch failed and the rocket broke up and fell into the Pacific Ocean.

The launch triggered an emergency meeting of the UN security council amid fears the launch was a covert military exercise. The rocket is capable of carrying warheads and has a range of 4,160 miles, putting Alaska and Hawaii within its reach.

The WorldView-1 satellite is operated by the US imaging company Digital Globe, which snapped the North Korean rocket on its launchpad last week using another satellite called Quickbird. Allison Puccioni, a senior image analyst for IHS Jane's, said it was the first time a satellite had captured a rocket mid-launch.

"The significance of this image is quite extraordinary," she said. "I have never seen anything like it."

The image shows a long contrail left behind by the rocket as it reaches supersonic speeds over the Korean peninsula.

The rocket itself appears in white at the end of the contrail. Puccioni said analysts are still studying the image, which appears to show the rocket at an angle.

"It looks as though there's been a slight change in its trajectory," she said. The rocket may have been caught during a stage separation.

The camera aboard the WorldView-1 satellite has a resolution of 50cm and would have been over North Korea from 11am to midday on the morning of the launch. It travels at 17,000mph and can only take one picture as it hurtles overhead.

Puccioni suspects Pyongyang had timed the controversial launch to coincide with the satellite's arrival, in the hope of maximising publicity of the launch.


4 comments:

  1. So, the neighborhood is changing. That's what it's come to. It's an upwardly mobile whirl and you wouldn't want to deny someone their upward mobility would you?

    The new people next door are weird, but what can you do? Mind your own business and hope/pray that they mind theirs. There's no need to make trouble with them, just be vigilant and prepared in case they somehow get out of hand.

    Oh yeah, you might want to think about moving to a better neighborhood. Unfortunately, what with the meth labs in the rural areas and the recent unpleasantness in Dubai, the options are quickly disappearing.

    You might want to arm-up and hunker-down.

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  2. Everyone is giving us the finger. Today's offering is some Somali pirates took one of our freighters hostage with 20 Americans on board. White House is 'closely monitoring' the situation.

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  3. We were playing around with Google Earth the other night. Sure enough, you can drive right along a rural Ohio road and there's the wife's place, house and barn. Not in real time though. I think this is a little scary. Don't much like the idea of one's residence up for everyone to see. On the other hand, one could put a web cam up in a tree and monitor a place from thousands of miles away.

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  4. That's quite the photo of that missile.

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