Japan’s space agency said communication has failed with a newly launched, innovative satellite with X-ray telescopes meant to study black holes and other space mysteries.
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency spokeswoman Izumi Yoshizaki yesterday said that efforts to restore communication links since the problem began on Saturday afternoon have been unsuccessful, and it was investigating what might have happened to the satellite, which is called Hitomi and was launched Feb. 17.
“We are really doing our best,” she said by telephone in Tokyo.
She said the agency was looking into a statement from the Joint Space Operations Center — the US military organization that tracks and identifies objects in space — that Hitomi might have splintered into several pieces.
Whether that had happened is unclear, Yoshizaki said. Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics astronomer Jonathan McDowell said he suspected the satellite had suffered an “energetic event,” possibly a gas leak or a battery explosion, that sent it tumbling end-over-end.
That would mean its antenna is not pointing where it needs to, which is why the satellite cannot communicate with the space agency, he said.
The danger is that in that state, the satellite might not be able to draw the solar energy it needs to its panels and its battery will run down before the space agency can reconnect with the satellite and try to fix it, he said.
“Everyone’s just gutted,” said McDowell, who works with another high-tech space X-ray telescope, Chandra. “To hear that they’ve run into this piece of bad luck, it’s so very sad. I know enough about how the sausage was made to know that this could have easily have happened to us. Space is very unforgiving.”
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