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Experts in space debris will meet later this week in Vienna at a U.N. seminar to come up with better ways to prevent future crashes, and the 5th European Conference on Space Debris in March at ESA. "We need more precision in space," said Kaufeler. "The current measurements (of space debris) are not precise enough." He noted that neither ESA nor NASA were able to predict last week's collision, although his scientists have been warning for two decades that such an accident could happen. "The problem of space debris is unique," said Kaufeler. "We need to work together, we need to unify our forces if we are going to solve it." Also this year, the Europeans plan to launch two new telescopes into space to study the far reaches of space. The Planck telescope will map background radiation that fills space, while the Herschel space telescope will give astronomers a view of far-infrared and sub-millimeter wavelengths.
[Associated
Press;
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