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22 Segundos
Alrededores del colegio
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09:21 Minutos
NASAs Orbiting Carbon Observatory satellite failed to reach orbit after its 4:55 am EST liftoff 24th February 2009 from Californias Vandenberg Air Force Base. Preliminary indications are that the fairing on the Taurus XL launch vehicle failed to separate. The fairing is a clamshell structure that encapsulates the satellite as it travels through the atmosphere. The spacecraft did not reach orbit and likely landed in the ocean near Antarctica, said John Brunschwyler, the program manager for the Taurus XL. A Mishap Investigation Board is to determine the cause of the launch failure.
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01:42 Minutos
A video of the launch of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, USA. OCO was launched on a Taurus XL rocket built by Orbital Sciences Corporation; during the launch the rockets fairing failed to separate and OCO did not make it to orbit. This was the second failed launch of the Taurus vehicle; the first being the failure of the Orbview-4/QuickTOMS mission on September 21, 2001. This was also the second failure of the Pegasus 3 to eject its payload, the first being the failure of the HETE/SAC-B mission in November of 1996.
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01:01 Minutos
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10:15 Minutos
OCO Visual is an Expert Advisor for MetaTrader 4 which enables you to place two pending orders visually. It automatically cancels one of the orders when the other one is filled. You may download a free copy of the EA from www.forexbrace.com
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08:01 Minutos
Spacecraft: Orbiting Carbon Observatory Launch Vehicle: Orbital Sciences Taurus Rocket Launch Location: Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. Launch Pad: Space Launch Complex 576-E Launch Date: Feb. 24, 2009 Launch Time: 1:55:30 am PST (4:55:30 am EST) Cost : $ 400 million Ignition and liftoff of the Taurus XL rocket carrying NASAs Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO), beginning a two-year mission to study what no spacecraft ever has: the sources and hiding places of atmospheric carbon dioxide. The rockets Stage 0 is burning as it propels the vehicle away from Vandenberg Air Force Base and toward a near-polar, sun-synchronous orbit where it will orbit Earth once every 99 minutes. A Taurus XL rocket is speeding roughly southward near the California coast to begin the Orbiting Carbon Observatorys mission. The solid-fueled rocket is leaving a brilliant trail of flames and smoke on its way into the sky. It will take 13 minutes for the four-stage booster to settle the satellite into its precise orbit. Then the OCO spacecraft will unfurl its twin solar arrays to begin powering its onboard systems. Several minutes into the flight of the Taurus rocket carrying NASAs Orbiting Carbon Observatory spacecraft, launch managers declared a contingency after the payload fairing failed to separate.
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38 Segundos
A mi padre le gusta cuidar su jardín y juntar palabras. Como a mí. Este verano le grabé con el teléfono su más reciente creación y como no nos cansamos de escucharle, decidí ponerle imagen
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04:08 Minutos
los angeles, california
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02:13 Minutos
Our model Ivette shows of in the latest color combination from OCO Pure. Black-Purple is in style this autumn, get your jacket now
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02:08 Minutos
www.nasa.gov Fairing Failed to Separate the payload fairing failed to separate from the vehicle during ascent. Contingency Declared
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