Observatory on a suicide mission.In the interest of safety, NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration. NASA in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration Independent U.S. has decided to plunge a spacecraft into the Pacific Ocean. Late last year, one of the three gyroscopes on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory Compton Gamma Ray Observatory Space observatory in service from 1991 to 2000 that was designed to identify the sources of celestial gamma rays. It was named after physicist Arthur Holly Compton. (GRO GRO Guerrero (Estado de México) GRO General Register Office (UK) GRO Greater Research Opportunities GRO Gamma Ray Observatory GRO Growth-Related Oncogene GRO Greensboro, North Carolina ) failed, leaving the satellite with the minimum number necessary to steer the craft. The space agency wants to direct the craft back through Earth's atmosphere in a controlled manner, while the two other gyros still function. So on May 26, after 9 years of mapping the gamma-ray sky, GRO will close up shop. Engineers then will fire the craft's thrusters, slowing the satellite and causing it to lose altitude. If all goes according to plan, GRO will reenter the atmosphere in early June. Most of the 17-ton satellite will vaporize va·por·ize v. To convert or be converted into a vapor. Vaporize To dissolve solid material or convert it into smoke or gas. as it crashes through Earth's atmosphere, but some 30 to 40 titanium pieces, a few as heavy as tens of kilograms, will survive. Debris will be scattered over an area about 25 kilometers wide and 1,500 km long in a remote region of the eastern Pacific about 4,000 km southeast of Hawaii. "Enough will survive to present a small but still unacceptable risk to populated areas if Compton were allowed to reenter in an uncontrolled manner," says Preston Burch, deputy program manager for space science operations at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center The Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) is a major NASA space research laboratory established on May 1, 1959 as NASA's first space flight center. GSFC employs approximately 10,000 civil servants and contractors, and is located approximately 6.5 miles northeast of Washington, D.C. in Greenbelt, Md. "We actively pursued the option that provided the lowest risk to human lives," notes Edward J. Weiler, NASA's associate administrator for the Office of Space Science in Washington, D.C. Scientists working on GRO, however, maintain that the craft could operate reliably even if another gyro fails. The satellite could rely on its magnetometers and sun sensors for navigation, and setting GRO slowly spinning would allow for a controlled reentry reentry n. taking back possession and going into real property which one owns, particularly when a tenant has failed to pay rent or has abandoned the property, or possession has been restored to the owner by judgment in an unlawful detainer lawsuit. , Goddard engineers have proposed. Although NASA's plan would minimize the threat to human life, the proposed alternatives could have safely extended the mission for several months to years, maintains GRO investigator James M. Ryan James M. Ryan (April 15, 1842 – September 19, 1917) businessman, oldest of seven sons and two daughters of Mary Ellen Fleming and Michael Ryan was born Bonavista, Newfoundland, Canada. Ryan married Katherine McCarthy of Carbonear, at Roxbury, Massachusetts on March 2 1897. of the University of New Hampshire in Durham. Among its landmark findings, the satellite revealed that the mysterious flashes of light known as gamma-ray bursts are spread uniformly across the sky and come from outside the galaxy. GRO's studies of high-energy emissions from the sun have taken on added importance, GRO scientists note, with the delay in launch of the High Energy Solar Spectroscopic spec·tro·scope n. An instrument for producing and observing spectra. spec tro·scop Imager, which suffered damage during recent testing (SN: 4/1/00, p. 215). Ending the GRO mission now, even though it has long surpassed its estimated 5-year lifetime, "is a terrible loss," says Hugh S. Hudson of the Solar Physics Research Corp. in Tucson.
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