Billions exit bank accounts after years of inflows

By Editor / October 1, 2021 / 0 Comments

Saab builds 9-3 test cars ahead of 2021 production launch

By Editor / October 19, 2021 / 0 Comments

Lithia relaxes grip on store operations

By Editor / October 9, 2021 / 0 Comments

Study raises new concern about earthquakes and fracking fluids

By Editor / September 27, 2021 / 0 Comments

Kirobo the talking robot blasts into space on historic mission

By Editor / November 6, 2021 / 0 Comments

U.S. to station space radar in Australia

U.S. to station space radar in Australia

The U.S. military said on Wednesday it will station in Australia an advanced radar to help track space junk threatening satellites and is working toward placement of a new, state-of-the-art deep-space telescope developed by the Pentagon’s advanced research arm.

The positioning of the advanced military equipment is another sign of deepening U.S. military ties with Australia and America’s widely touted “pivot” to Asia. It follows an agreement last year for a rotating training presence of up to 2,500 Marines in Australia’s northern tropical city of Darwin.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Australia’s Defense Minister Stephen Smith made the announcement after high-level talks in the city of Perth, adding the C-Band radar would be moved from its present location on the island of Antigua some time in 2014.

“There is now so much debris in space that being acutely aware of space debris is very important to all nation states,” Smith said, warning that space junk could threaten satellites.

The Pentagon said in a fact-sheet the C-Band radar can track up to 200 objects a day and can help identify satellites, their orbits and “potential anomalies”.

Once relocated to Australia’s Harold E. Holt Naval Communications Station, it will be the first low-earth orbit space surveillance network sensor in the southern hemisphere.

The United States and Australia are also working to move to Australia an advanced optical telescope, known as the Space Surveillance Telescope, developed by the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA.

Panetta said the United States and Australia were also in discussions about the establishment of a “Combined Communications Gateway” in Australia that would give both countries greater access to the Wideband Global Satellite communications satellites currently in orbit.

“All of that represents a major leap forward in bilateral space cooperation,” Panetta said.