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Women Naval officers reach Point Nemo - Why it's called graveyard of satellites
On october 2, 2024, Tarini set out from Goa. On december 22, it completed the second stage of the journey by arriving at Lyttelton Port in New Zealand. For the longest portion of the voyage, the crew left Lyttelton early this month to go to Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands. This section is around 5,600 nautical miles long.
Known mostly as a satellite cemetery, this little location in the Pacific Ocean is hundreds of kilometers away from any mainland or settlement.
NASA and other space organizations have two choices when a spacecraft reaches the end of its usable life: either launch it so far into space that it will never return, or spend the rest of its fuel to bring it back to Earth.
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Point Nemo, named for Captain Nemo from Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, is a place of mystery and seclusion. "Nemo" means "no one" in Latin, highlighting how isolated it is.
Because of its low nutritional content, the ocean around Point Nemo is particularly barren of marine life, making it an unfriendly place for fish and other animals.