Japan’s Flagship Astronomy Satellite Declared Lost

Nine weeks after its launch, Japan’s flagship astronomical satellite Hitomi has been declared lost by the country’s national space agency. The satellite had been launched on February 17 but had started to tumble out of control on March 26. At the same time, other space agencies around the world began to notice debris in the vicinity of the satellite, although it couldn’t be confirmed until recently if the pieces belonged to Hitomi.

In a notice published on April 28, the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) said it was giving up on efforts to restore the satellite, whose scientific payload was designed to survey a broad range of cosmic phenomena, especially high-energy events that emitted X-rays. Some of its instruments were three decades in the building. The satellite itself cost $286 million to put together and launch.

According to various reports, Hitomi was in trouble at all after its computer miscalculated that the satellite was spinning (when it was not) in orbit. After an initial attempt to stabilise the craft failed, Hitomi was left actually spinning. About 70 minutes after the miscalculation, it entered safe-mode and fired a thruster to resolve the problem once and for all, but because it fired the wrong thruster, it started to tumble out of orbit.

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