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 received a notice that the space telescope and 
Cosmos 1805 would miss each other by just 700 feet. The mission 
team monitored the situation over the next day and it became clear 
that the two spacecraft, traveling in different orbits, would zip through 
the same point in space within 30 milliseconds of one another, NASA 
officials said."My immediate reaction was, 'Whoa, this is different from 
anything we've seen before!'" NASA's Fermi project scientist Julie McEnery 
said in a statement.The Russian space junk was travelling at a speed 
of 27,000 miles per hour in relation to Fermi. If it had 
smashed into the space telescope the explosion of the two spacecraft would 
have released "as much energy as two and a half tons of 
explosives," NASA officials said"It was clear we had to be ready to 
move Fermi out of the way, and that's when I alerted our 
Flight Dynamics Team that we were planning a maneuver," McEnery added.After 
making those calculations, scientists started planning to fire Fermi's thrusters 
specifically designed to move the satellite out of the way if these 
situations arise."It's similar to forecasting rain at a specific time and 
place a week in advance," Eric Stoneking, the attitude control lead engineer 
for Fermi at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center said of predicting these 
kinds of impacts in a statement. "As the date approaches, uncertainties 
in the prediction decrease and the initial picture may change dramatically."The 
two sp
FILE - In this Saturday Aug. 6, 2011 file photo, the shrouded 
body of 12-month-old Liin Muhumed Surow, who died of malnutrition 25 days 
after reaching the camp according to her father Mumumed, lies before burial 
at UNHCR's Ifo Extension camp, near Dadaab in Kenya close to the 
Somali border. Officials in East Africa say a report to be released 
this week by two U.S. government-funded famine and food agencies gives the 
highest death toll yet from Somalia's 2011 famine, estimating that 260,000 
people died - more than double previous estimates. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay, 
File)The Associated PressFILE - In this Monday, July 25, 2011 file photo, 
an unidentified child reacts as he is weighed at a field hospital 
of Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) in the town of Dadaab, 
Kenya. Officials in East Africa say a report to be released this 
week by two U.S. government-funded famine and food agencies gives the highest 
death toll yet from Somalia's 2011 famine, estimating that 260,000 people 
died - more than double previous estimates. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam, 
File)The Associated PressFILE - In this Saturday, July 23, 2011 file photo, 
a woman sits with her child at a local hospital to receive 
treatment for malnutrition at the border town of  Dadaab, Kenya. Officials 
in East Africa say a report to be released this week by 
two U.S. government-funded famine and food agencies gives the highest death 
toll yet from Somalia's 2011 famine, esti


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