The Falcon-9 was launched in 2015 and hasn’t been able to take hold since then. The rocket launched the Climate Observatory into deep space, or more precisely the so-called Lagrangian point, a point in space at which the combined gravitational force of two larger celestial bodies (Earth and the Sun) is equal to a third, much smaller one. .
Watchman Article – Commodity According to the rocket, which is already an insignificant space, has not been able to get out of the Earth and the Moon since February 2015, and now its trajectory changes so much that it can crash into our facilities. Experts say that space debris will meet the moon in the coming weeks and will strike at a speed of 2.58 kilometers per second. The top of Falcon-9 will likely reach the far side of the moon on March 4, somewhere near the equator.
Bill Gray, who writes software that monitors near-Earth objects, says the rocket came close to guard on January 5, but will certainly crash in March.
For those who ask: Yes, the old Falcon 9 second stage left in high orbit in 2015 will hit the moon on March 4. It’s interesting, but it’s not a big deal.
– Jonathan McDowell (@planet4589) January 25 2022