Russian military says spacecraft debris falls in ocean

MOSCOW, (Reuters) – Pieces of a failed Russian  Mars probe plummeted into the Pacific Ocean far off the Chilean  coast today, Russian news agencies cited a military official  as saying.
Debris from the Phobos-Grunt craft fell into the sea some  1,250 km (775 miles) west of the coastal island of Wellington,  state-run RIA and Itar-Tass cited Aerospace Defence Forces  spokesman Colonel Alexei Zolotukhin as saying.
The spacecraft never made it out of Earth’s orbit after its  November launch on a rare interplanetary mission for Russia’s  struggling space program.
It was not immediately clear whether all the parts of the  craft that did not burn up in the atmosphere had fallen in the  same area.
Russia’s space agency Roskosmos had said debris from its  doomed 14-ton craft, which included 11 tons of toxic rocket  fuel, might fall in the Atlantic Ocean about midway between  Brazil and West Africa.
Due to constant changes in the upper atmosphere, which is  strongly influenced by solar activity, the exact time and place  of the probe’s return had been unknown.
Experts said the falling space junk posed little risk, with  the probe’s aluminium fuel tank expected to burn up high in the  atmosphere.
“If anyone gets to see it, it will be a fabulous show. I  don’t think there has been an explosion of such a large volume  of fuel in space history,” Igor Marinin, editor of a space  journal published by Roskosmos, said earlier today.