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Post by rugbytoffee on Jan 26, 2022 20:01:36 GMT
A SpaceX rocket is on collision course with the moon after hurtling through space for seven years.
The booster launched in Florida in February 2015 as part of a mission to send space weather satellite on a long-range mission.
The spent Falcon 9 rocket stage is on course to hit the Moon in March.
The rocket’s second stage was high enough that it did not have enough fuel to return to Earth's atmosphere.
It also lacked the energy to escape the gravity of the Earth-Moon system, so it has been following a chaotic orbit since February 2015 and experts have now revealed it is on a collision course with the moon.
Space object tracker Bill Gray has said he believes the four-tonne object will strike the far side of the moon, near its equator, on March 4.
It is expected to impact the Moon at a velocity of about 2.58 km/s - over 3,500 mph.
The details are unclear and there will be slight alterations to its orbit. Mr Gray wrote: “These unpredictable effects are very small.” He said the precise time and location of the impact could change.
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