Wed. Nov 6th, 2024
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The US military shot down what US officials called a Chinese surveillance balloon off the coast of South Carolina on Saturday. Officials said that the US Navy planned to recover the debris, which is in shallow water.

The US and Canada tracked the balloon as it crossed the Aleutian Islands, passed over western Canada and entered US airspace over Idaho.

US Defence department officials confirmed that the military was tracking the balloon at an altitude of about 60,000 feet, including over Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana. The base houses the 341st Missile Wing, which operates nuclear intercontinental ballistic missiles.

The Pentagon has reported that a second suspected Chinese balloon was seen over Latin America. Officials also told reporters that a third Chinese surveillance balloon was operating somewhere else in the world, and that the balloons are part of a Chinese military surveillance program.

Monitoring an adversary from a balloon dates back to 1794, when the French used a hot air balloon to track Austrian and Dutch troops in the Battle of Fleurus.

Aerospace engineer Iain Boyd of the University of Colorado Boulder explains how spy balloons work and why anyone would use one in the 21st century.

What is a spy balloon?

A spy balloon is literally a gas-filled balloon that is flying quite high in the sky, more or less where we fly commercial airplanes.

It has some sophisticated cameras and imaging technology on it, and it’s pointing all of those instruments down at the ground.

It’s collecting information through photography and other imaging of whatever is going on down on the ground below it..

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The moment a US fighter jet shoots down suspected Chinese spy balloon

Why would someone want to use a spy balloon instead of spy satellites?

Satellites are the preferred method of spying from overhead. Spy satellites are above us today, typically at one of two different types of orbit.

The first is called low Earth orbit, and, as the name suggests, those satellites are relatively close to the ground. But they’re still several hundred miles above us. For imaging and taking photographs, the closer you are to something, the more clearly you can see it, and this applies to spying as well. The satellites that are in low Earth orbit have the advantage that they’re closer to the Earth so they’re able to see things more clearly than satellites that are farther away.

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