Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Detectives found a top secret (and confidential) satellite behind Trump's Twitter photo.

Detectives found a top secret (and confidential) satellite behind Trump's Twitter photo.

It's only a matter of time: amateur detectives think they have tracked down the satellite that took high-resolution images after the Iranian missile disaster.

President Donald Trump tweeted this photo on August 30th and wrote: "The United States of safire is not involved in this catastrophic accident. This happened in 2005, during the final launch preparation for SLV launch at Seminan- 1 launch site. Intelligence experts immediately noticed the high resolution of the photo and listed it as a possible secret, that is, until the president decrypted the photo with his Twitter. Many experts told news organizations that they were worried that the decrypted photos might reveal unknown information monitored by U.S. drones or satellites.

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Obviously right. Amateur satellite trackers reverse-engineered this image and found that it probably came from the highly confidential American satellite 224. Marco Langbroek, a Dutch satellite tracker, told MPR News that USA224 was suspected to be a KH- 1 1 surveillance satellite, which was a little-known secret device.

"It's basically a very big telescope, no different from the Hubble Space Telescope." But Michael Thompson, a graduate student at Purdue University, tracks satellites in his spare time. He said:

Even confidential satellites are easy to find. Thompson told MPR News that once a satellite is discovered, it only needs some simple mathematical operations to calculate its position in orbit at any given time.

According to the online tracker network, the shadows in the photos posted by Trump on Twitter enabled detectives to determine when the photos were taken. Lambrock can also calculate the viewing angle by observing the inclination of the circular launch pad. From there, he and his tracker matched the photos with the nearest satellite at that time, which was American 224.

Related: You can now see 15 secret locations on Google Earth (there are still 3 you can't see).

During the final preparation for the launch of Safir SLV launched by Iran's Semnan launch site, the United States was not involved in a catastrophic accident. I extend my best wishes to Iran and wish it good luck in determining what happened on the site of 1. August 30, 2009

This discovery is surprising, because many experts believe that the clear image in the photo of the launch pad must come from the drone. Melissa Hanam, a satellite imaging expert and deputy director of the Vienna Open Nuclear Network, said that it is a challenge to get such a clear view in the Earth's atmosphere. Hannum said:

"I think opponents will take a look at this photo and then reverse engineer it to understand how the sensor itself works and what post-production technology they use." . He was also puzzled that the President chose to post these pictures on Twitter. KH- 1 1 satellites are confidential, and the images taken by these satellites are also confidential. "If the opponent obtains the image of KH- 1 1, it will show the optical capabilities of these space assets," Lombok wrote. 1984, a naval intelligence analyst was sent to prison for leaking three photos of KH- 1 1 to the press.

These 22 strangest photos of military weapons: the most outrageous 10 military experiment at the top secret military base in Greenland during the Cold War was originally published in Life Science.