Vía un correo de un amigo, me entero que al parecer hay problemas con el satelite venezolano VENESAT-1.
La fuente de la información es el es el diario chino
South China Morning Post, la noticia en cuestión fechada el 5 de Diciembre de 2008 es esta:
Satellite problems hit Beijing's space export ambitions (
Problemas con satélite golpean las ambiciones de Beijing de exportar el espacio).
En una práctica bien capitalista el
South China Morning Post no tiene acceso público sino que debes suscribirte para poder leer las noticias, despues de aplicar a un
free-trial de 14 días pude revisar la noticia la cual mas o menos plantea que:
El satélite venezolano Simón Bolívar, de unos 430 millones de US $, confronta serios problemas operacionales, que el equipo de ingenieros chinos está tratando de resolver. Sin embargo, también afirman que los detalles de la falla son hasta ahora desconocidos. Resaltan, además, que hay mucha tensión en torno al asunto, ya que hay muy poco tiempo para resolver el asunto, visto que se supone que el satélite debe entrar enoperaciones en Febrero de 2009.
Igualmente, dice que quien más sufre es el programa espacial chino, yaque es la segunda falla en menos de un mes de satélites chinos.
Aqui les dejo el texto de la noticia completa para aquellos que no quieran aplicar al
free-trial:
Satellite problems hit Beijing's space export ambitions
Stephen Chen
Dec 05, 2008
A 3 billion yuan (HK$3.4 billion) satellite China built and launched
for Venezuela in late October had encountered some serious operational
glitches that Chinese engineers were striving to fix, space-industry
sources confirmed yesterday.
Details of the malfunction are unknown, and satellite experts are
divided on the cause of the issue, as only a handful of self-detecting
sensors are on board and the information they pass down is limited.
The technicians are anxious, as there is little time left for debate.
The Simon Bolivar Satellite - a 5-tonne communications device for
radio, television and data transmission - was launched at the Xichang
Satellite Launch Centre in Sichuan on October 30. It is being tested
and official service is scheduled to begin in February.
If the handover is postponed or aborted it would be a blow to the
Venezuelan government, which has touted the satellite as proof that
Latin American countries can achieve a technological breakthrough
without US assistance.
The incident would also hinder China's ambitious and rapidly growing
"space diplomacy", aimed at forging political and economic alliances
with developing countries - especially oil- or mineral-rich nations in
South America and Africa - by admitting them to the space club at an
affordable price.
But the reputation of China's space programme would suffer the most,
industry experts say, as it represented the second failure of another
country's satellite within a month.
Nigcomsat-1, a communication satellite built and launched for Nigeria
last year, failed on November 11 because of a solar-panel breakdown.
The failure was announced by the China Great Wall Industry
Corporation, the international outlet of the China Aerospace Science
and Technology Corporation, which then sacked a senior official in
charge of the programme, sending shock waves through the industry.
The nation rarely sacks senior officials for satellite failures, as
space missions often encounter problems. The unusually severe
punishment came partly because Nigcomsat-1 was China's first exported
satellite.
The country hoped it could open the international satellite market
long dominated by the United States and Russia.
The punishment was harsh because a product-quality flaw on the solar
panel was "utterly unpreventable", a satellite expert with the Chinese
Academy of Space Technology said.
"In a space project, we can make two kinds of mistakes. One is
unpreventable because we might be using a new technology, exploring a
new environment or be caught by an issue that we had not heard of
before.
"In this case, you would not expect to be punished," the professor said.
"But if you mess up a mission because of management blunders, such as
bypassing necessary quality checks, you must take responsibility." The
professor said the Nigcomsat-1 satellite had been hastily built to
meet a very tight deadline