产品展示
  • 8/10寸双高音车载低音炮12v24V货车汽车音响家用电脑手机蓝牙音箱
  • 纳智捷锐3/U5/大7SUV纳5野马T70荣威W5原装70AH电瓶瓦尔塔蓄电池
  • 适用于荣威550 750 名爵MG6MG7增压器电磁阀软管废气再循环真空管
  • 适配大众CC迈腾帕萨特途观1.8TSI自动挡原装电瓶瓦尔塔汽车蓄电池
  • 路虎发现5改装后排座椅升高器座椅加高底座发现5座椅增高配件支架
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

新闻中心

S. Korean military continues operation to salvage N. Korean rocket debris

2024-06-07 02:24:25      点击:510
Debris <strong></strong>of North Korean space-launch vehicle is being salvaged in the Yellow-Sea by the Navy, on May 31. Yonhap
Debris of North Korean space-launch vehicle is being salvaged in the Yellow-Sea by the Navy, on May 31. Yonhap

The South Korean military continued its work Sunday to search and salvage the wreckage of a North Korean rocket that crashed into the Yellow Sea earlier this week but wrapped up the day's operations due to unfavorable conditions.

The rocket, that the North claimed was carrying a satellite, crashed into the waters some 200 kilometers west of the western South Korean island of Eocheong on Wednesday morning after an "abnormal flight," Seoul's military had said.

The Navy has been trying to recover a 15-meter part of the vehicle, named Chollima-1. It is estimated to have a length ranging from 29 to 30 meters.

On Saturday, the military deployed deep-sea divers from the Sea Salvage and Rescue Unit to the remote area to attach high-strength ropes to the debris, which sank to a depth of 75 meters on the seafloor.

In a message sent to reporters at around 5 p.m., the Joint Chiefs of Staff said it will wrap up the operation for the day due to unfavorable conditions and resume Monday.

"Depending on the circumstances at the site tomorrow, we plan to conduct salvage operations," it said.

Apart from the debris spotted by the South Korean military Wednesday, which is believed to be the second and third stages of the launch vehicle, officials have not found additional parts.

South Korea and the United States plan to jointly examine the debris of the wreckage once it is retrieved. (Yonhap)


S. Korea seeks to block N. Korea from acquiring satellite
How (and why) we grieve on Instagram. It's complicated.