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US Air Force launches surveillance satellite

VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, California (AP) — A satellite designed to monitor dangers from space debris and other objects near the Earth was launched late Saturday from the central California coast, the Air Force said.A Minotaur 4 rocket carrying the Space Based Space Surveillance satellite blasted...

VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, California (AP) — A satellite designed to monitor dangers from space debris and other objects near the Earth was launched late Saturday from the central California coast, the Air Force said.

A Minotaur 4 rocket carrying the Space Based Space Surveillance satellite blasted off at 9:41 p.m. Pacific time and headed toward orbit, officials from Vandenberg Air Force Base said in a news release.

The satellite is designed to detect and monitor debris, satellites and other space objects that could be a threat to national security, communications and weather satellites.

Monitoring from space avoids the limitations that ground observing systems experience due to weather, the atmosphere and time of day.

Col. Richard Boltz, commander of the 30th Space Wing, said in a written statement that the satellite will "greatly enhance our existing space situational awareness," a move that is "vital to protecting our space-based assets."

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