Showing posts with label Phobos-Grunt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phobos-Grunt. Show all posts

Linda Moulton Howe | Part 2: Interview w/Jim Marrs, Viewer Q&A | Nov. 4, 2020

Source: earthfiles.com



Topics:
- COVID-19 update
- England to lock down for 4 weeks
- Dr. Fauci warns “The United States could not possibly be positioned more poorly”.
- US has nearly 10m cases, 238k deaths

- Part 2 of 2007 Interview with Jim Marrs talking about his book “Psi Spies: The True Story of America’s Psychic Warfare”
- “People living underground and people living in domed cities…due to continued ozone depletion.
- Ingo Swann remote viewed Jupiter and Mars
- “… a circular object came out to meet the Phobos 2 spacecraft”
- “NASA has gone to extreme lengths to cover up these facts…they are keeping secrets about UFOs and activity on Mars.”
- “The people in charge don’t want remote viewing used generally…so that the public does not get a clear picture”
- Ingo Swann’s April 27, 1973 remote viewing session on Jupiter
- “Tremendous winds…crystals in the atmosphere…an enormous mountain range..crystal cloud cover”

- Phobos 2 failed mission from 1989
- spacecraft appeared to be spinning out of control after encounter with UFO

Russia's Phobos-Grunt probe and China's Yinghuo-1 satellite launched, November 8, 2011

Source: cctv.com



Russia's Phobos-Grunt probe and China's Yinghuo-1 satellite were launched from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on a Zenit-2SB rocket at 20:16 GMT Tuesday.

The main aim of the Phobos-Grunt is to bring back the first ever soil sample from Phobos, the largest of Mars' two moons. The mission will also collect bacteria samples for two Russian and one US biological experiments.

Meanwhile, China's first Mars probe Yinghuo-1 will go into orbit around Mars and observe the planet itself. The Chinese probe, which will not land on Mars nor return to Earth, will stay permanently in space and communicate with ground control directly through satellites. The launch of Phobos-Grunt and Yinghuo-1, originally scheduled for October 2009 on a Russian carrier rocket, had been postponed until 2011 due to "technical reasons" on the Russian side.

Update:
Russia’s unmanned Phobos-Grunt spacecraft may be in serious trouble, as it apparently has encountered problems with either computer software or the propulsion system, or perhaps both. There appears to be some confusion about what may have happened, with various sources reporting different things.

Russian Space Agency head Vladimir Popovkin was quoted by the Ria news agency, with a Google translation, “We’ve had a bad night, we could not detect long spacecraft, now found his position. It was found that the propulsion system failed. There was neither the first nor the second inclusion.”

Roughly, it appears that at first they lost telemetry with the spacecraft, but then were able to locate it and found that the first and second burns did not occur.

The spacecraft launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan by a Zenit-2 booster rocket at 12:16 a.m. Moscow time on Wednesday and separated from the booster about 11 minutes later.
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