The Polish Space Agency sent letters about suspicious objects to the wrong place (3 photos + 1 video)
No one would have remembered the existence of such an important organization if the debris of Elon Musk's rocket had not fallen in the Poznan area the other day.
The Polish Space Agency (POLSA) spent six months sending important and urgent letters to the wrong person in the village. And it is unlikely that any of the Poles would have remembered that the country had such an organization if a high-profile emergency had not occurred.
The tasks of the Polish Space Agency, in addition to, of course, conquering the Universe, included informing emergency services and the Ministry of Defense about suspicious air objects. On February 19, debris from a Falcon 9 rocket stage belonging to Elon Musk's SpaceX fell near the Polish city of Poznan. When the emergency occurred, no one knew what exactly had fallen from the sky, only the brave employees of the space agency knew, and they reported the threat to the appropriate authorities, but it turned out that they had sent emails to a non-existent address.
Fireworks from the combustion of the 2nd stage of the Falcon-9 launch vehicle in the atmosphere, but as it turned out, not everything burned up
Polish space pioneers insist that they are not to blame, because they were not notified that the recipient's address had changed, so they continued to send emails to an outdated address. It is reported that now the country's Ministry of Defense wants to fire everyone involved in the flight, including the head of POLSA. The military directly called the department ineffective.
"They sent a message to an e-mail that has been out of date for six months. This is a serious matter," the country's Defense Ministry explained.
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Rocket debris
As for the debris that fell in Poznan, its total weight is about four tons. According to media reports, the second stage of the Falcon-9 rocket is usually deorbited and burns up in the atmosphere immediately after completing its flight mission. But this time, everything went wrong - the stage slowly descended until it returned to the atmosphere over the Irish Sea on February 19. The launch of the rocket with the group of Starlink-11.4 satellites was carried out from California on the night of February 1-2.
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The POLSA logo looks strange
Recall that the first and only Polish cosmonaut Miroslaw Hermaszewski flew on the Soyuz-30 spacecraft in 1978.