Mystery object spotted: China's Shenlong in a secret mission
The United States Space Force detected a mysterious object at 370 miles above the Earth. It was launched into orbit by the Chinese spacecraft Shenlong. This is already its third such mission, writes the South China Morning Post.
6:41 PM EDT, June 8, 2024
The South China Morning Post asserts that the Chinese autonomous secret spacecraft has already been on its third mission in Earth's lower orbit. During previous missions, it launched satellites into space. Currently, it is unclear what this newly-detected object is.
Chinese mysterious object in Earth's orbit
"The unknown object was ejected from Shenlong on May 25 and detected by US Space Force space domain awareness teams. Catalogued as object 59884, it has been orbiting Earth since then at an altitude of around 600km" the newspaper reads.
Since its release from the plane, it has not performed any maneuvers - asserts Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
It may just be an inert piece of hardware - he suggests.
According to the newspaper, neither the plane nor the mysterious object have emitted any new signals since the end of May.
Shenlong, which translates to "Divine Dragon," is often seen as the American military spaceplane X-37B equivalent. Very little is known about it.
It made its maiden flight in 2020, which lasted just two days. Then in August 2022, Shenlong set off on its second mission, which lasted nine months. During this mission, a subsatellite was reportedly ejected and recaptured a couple of times by the plane to test related technologies., writes the newspaper.
What is this Chinese mission?
Little is known about the course of this third mission by Beijing, except that the spacecraft raised its orbit from about 190 miles to 370 miles by the end of January, where it has remained.
Chinese space authorities have not disclosed details of the latest Shenlong mission or its end date. All that was communicated was included in a brief report published by state media shortly after the launch.
"It’s going to operate in orbit for a period of time before returning to its intended landing site in China," the Xinhua agency quoted the launch report.
"Reusable technology verification and space science experiments will be carried out to provide technical support for the peaceful use of space," is how China justified the resumption of these mysterious near-Earth missions.