Takes A Licking...
Takes A Licking...
And Keeps On Ticking...
Best use of "Over-Qualified".
Originally shared by Kam-Yung Soh
Your buddies at the Centre make them tough, John Baez. "A Singapore-made device thought to have been destroyed in a rocket explosion last year has been found intact and still operational.
Last October, scientists at the Centre for Quantum Technologies (CQT), National University of Singapore, were horrified when the Antares rocket exploded just seconds after take-off from a launch pad in Virginia, in the US.
[...]
The CQT scientists thought their 300g device, embedded in a Danish satellite called GomX-2 in the rocket, and costing $12,000, had been lost. But they have been told that the satellite was found on a beach near the launch site and returned to GomSpace, the company in Denmark that built it.
Assistant Professor Alexander Ling, a CQT principal investigator, told The Straits Times: "Just after the SG50 weekend, our Danish colleagues rebooted the satellite, and they sent us some data."
The CQT scientists had collected data with the device before it was placed in the rocket. By comparing the two sets of data, they concluded that the device was intact and still working."
http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/singapore-made-device-survives-rocket-explosion
And Keeps On Ticking...
Best use of "Over-Qualified".
Originally shared by Kam-Yung Soh
Your buddies at the Centre make them tough, John Baez. "A Singapore-made device thought to have been destroyed in a rocket explosion last year has been found intact and still operational.
Last October, scientists at the Centre for Quantum Technologies (CQT), National University of Singapore, were horrified when the Antares rocket exploded just seconds after take-off from a launch pad in Virginia, in the US.
[...]
The CQT scientists thought their 300g device, embedded in a Danish satellite called GomX-2 in the rocket, and costing $12,000, had been lost. But they have been told that the satellite was found on a beach near the launch site and returned to GomSpace, the company in Denmark that built it.
Assistant Professor Alexander Ling, a CQT principal investigator, told The Straits Times: "Just after the SG50 weekend, our Danish colleagues rebooted the satellite, and they sent us some data."
The CQT scientists had collected data with the device before it was placed in the rocket. By comparing the two sets of data, they concluded that the device was intact and still working."
http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/singapore-made-device-survives-rocket-explosion
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