India refuses to comment after NASA says it endangered astronauts with a satellite missile



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India declined to comment on Nasa's claims that astronauts were endangered by its decision to blow up a satellite in space.

The space agency said people aboard the International Space Station were now living with the risk of being hit by debris that had been distributed over the Earth and could collide with the floating laboratory.

The spokesman of the Indian Ministry of Defense, Colonel Aman Anand, said there was no official response to the statement of NASA's administrator, Jim Bridenstine, when of a public meeting in Washington on Monday.


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Mr Bridenstine said that by shooting down one of his own satellites with a rocket last week, India had left debris high enough in orbit to pose a risk to the International Space Station.

The Indian Ministry of External Affairs, in a statement issued after the March 27 test, said any debris generated would decompose and fall back to Earth in the coming weeks as the test was conducted in the lower atmosphere.

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25/30 Hubble looks at the busiest place in the Milky Way

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30/30 The Chandra observatory sees a heart in the darkness

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The International Space Station serves as a research laboratory and has been home to astronauts from various countries since its launch in orbit in 1998.

Bridenstine said NASA had identified 400 pieces of debris and followed 60.

"We know that 24 of them go beyond the apex of the International Space Station – it's a terrible thing to create," he said.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the test last week and said the destruction of the satellite demonstrates India's ability as a "space power" alongside the United States, Russia and Russia. China.

Pallava Bagla, science editor of the New Delhi TV channel, said Indian officials had made it clear that debris would break down in three weeks.

"The amount of debris that the United States has created in space itself is gigantic compared to some debris from the Indian test.

"In orbit, we have 2,000 functional satellites.

"800 of them belong to the United States." India has only 48 functional satellites in orbit, "he said.

Lieutenant-General David Thompson, Deputy Command Commander of the US Air Force Space Space, told a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing that the Air Force had detected approximately 270 objects in the Debris field created during the destruction of the satellite by India. increase.

He added that the air force would inform satellite operators if any of these objects posed a threat to satellites in orbit.

Additional report by Associated Press

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