US embarrassed by Russia's Kinzel missiles: launches two missile tracking satellites into space


- Even hypersonic missiles cannot be hidden from the satellite: it will send information to the Pentagon immediately

Cape Canaveral: The United States has begun more preparations to secure its skies. It has launched two secret satellites to track hypersonic missiles that will do the job of tracking both missiles. Whether Russia, China or North Korea launch hypersonic missiles, those satellites will send their information to the Pentagon immediately. Both satellites and the Atlas-V rocket were launched from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. The US space force has dubbed the mission USSF-12. The first and second stages of the rocket were detonated just four and a half minutes after the lift-off. The above have been deployed in 'Geo Synchronous' orbit. But it did not say what kind of plants it had.

One of the two satellites is called Wild Field of View (WFOV). It is becoming a testing platform for the US Space Force Space System Command (SSC), a new generation of missile surveillance technology. The second satellite contains a number of technology demonstration payloads from the U.S. Department of Defense, dubbed the USSF-12 Ring, but the payloads of the plants installed on both satellites have not been released.

The design of these satellites also includes the company that built the James Webb Telescope. The WFOV has an 8-foot-long imaging sensor made by L3 Harris Technology. This is the same company that built the lenses and optical instruments of NASA's Hubble and James Webb Space Telescope, meaning it has a technique that can see the world very clearly, take pictures and make videos.

The United States has had to build the satellites because Russia released an animated video a few days ago showing footage of Kinzel missiles attacking the Edge. These missiles are five times faster than sound. These satellites have been swept away because the technology currently deployed in space cannot trace hypersonic missiles.

Comments