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Tuesday, September 13, 2011

NASA launches rocket moon's gravity discovery


The U.S. space agency NASA launched first unmanned rockets yesterday into space from Cape Canaveral Air Florida to connect probes to the moon to study inwardly.

Reuters reported that the missile with a length of 8.37 meters was launched from a base overlooking the ocean to take the course over the Atlantic before it enters into orbit around the Earth.

The agency said it was Delta 2 rocket launch, two days after the original date which was scheduled for release after the strong winds that hampered because of the need for adequate time to review the technical data of the missile after it was unloaded by the fuel tanks after the experience of previous releases.

The duo will start Alvdaúaan graphitic Racaffre Antriur Laboratory and a long journey in which they move slowly on the moon Aisalah on 31 December and the first of January next.

It is due to be duo Alvdaúaan at a point in space at a distance of 5.1 million km away, where be equally appeal of the sun with Earth's gravity and come maps of gravity as anonymous information on the emergence of the moon and its development as it complements the high-quality images of the moon and the ongoing analysis of samples of rocks and soils returned by the flight of Apollo between 1969 and 1972.

It was designed so that the younger duo orbiting the moon alone for both mapping to increase and the lack of gravity of the moon and through the linked radio waves from the probes will be able to measure changes in the moon's gravity, even if one micron was equivalent to display a red blood cell.

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