HTX focus on OEM CNC metal parts for 21 years. We can provide products about Stamping Part.We are factory on ShenZhen China. Waiting for your any questions.
Mao
Shenzhen HTX Technology Co., Ltd
Shenzhen HTX Precision Hardware Co., LTD
——————————————————————————————-
Tel: +0086 0755-8936 8981 Fax: +0086 0755 8483 7907
Wechat/Mobile/Whatsapp:+0086 15012715998
Email : sales05@htx-metal.com
Web: www.htx-metal.com www.htxmetal.com
——————————————————————————————-
Address : No.16,XiePing Industrial Area,LongGang District,ShenZhen,GuangDong,China
Certification: GB / T19001-2016 / ISO9001:2015 CertificateNo.30418Q00468R0S
The following article is about:(Cara Delevingne ‘space selfie not meant for space’
)
From: BBC news (https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-50207191
)
正文:
A device used in a Samsung publicity campaign
to send a selfie of the actress Cara Delevingne “into space” has
crash-landed in Michigan, US.
A woman shared a photo of it on the grass in her garden on Facebook.
The idea was for people to upload their selfies to a website, where they would then be selected at random and returned with a view of the planet behind them.
But one expert told BBC News it was unlikely the device was ever intended to get as far as space.
“If it’s something that’s been attached to a high altitude balloon, it’s probably gone up around 25km to 35km [22 miles],” said Hugh Lewis, astrophysics professor at the University of Southampton.
“From there, you can see the sky is black, you are out of most of the atmosphere, you can see the curvature of the Earth, it looks like space – you can see the photographic appeal.”
Prof Lewis added while definitions of where space begin varied, it was generally at about 100km in altitude.
Samsung has been contacted by BBC News for comment.
The technology company told NBC the landing had been planned.
The craft Michigan farmer Nancy Mumby-Welke photographed in her garden was “a really weird hybrid craft”, said Dr Alice Gorman, an expert on space debris.
It has landing legs, a small tent-shaped body like something designed to land on a surface, but also solar panels like a satellite.
“For the landowners, their impression is that it’s come from space because it looks like a satellite – but it isn’t,” Dr Gorman said.
“The giveaway is – it’s not burned. It would never have reached the surface of the Earth [intact from space].
“It’s in good nick, the solar panels look a bit bent but it didn’t land at high speeds.”
Cara Delevingne is not the first
person to capture a space selfie. Astronauts Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin
have taken photographs of themselves in space – and the Curiosity Rover took
photos of itself on the surface of Mars.