The two space probes made a rendezvous in orbit over the Pacific Ocean for 15 minutes, keeping a distance of 7 feet between them.
NASDA officials at the Tsukuba Space Center north of Tokyo said today the satellites then met again and made a rendezvous over Mexico using automatic and remote controls.
The link up follows the launching Saturday of Japan's first interplanetary spacecraft on a mission to search for signs of water under the surface of Mars. The mission could discover indications of whether life might once have existed on Mars.
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JSN Archive: ETS-7 and Japan's Space Robotics Program
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