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Space probes have been sent to natural satellites including the Earth's Moon, Mars's Deimos, and the moons of the giant planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
At any time, there are several thousand artificial satellites orbiting the Earth, including active satellites, satellites that have ended their working lives, and discarded sections of rockets. The brightest artificial satellites can be seen by the naked eye. Artificial satellites eventually re-enter the Earth's atmosphere. Usually they burn up by friction, but sometimes debris falls to the Earth's surface, as with Skylab and Salyut 7.
Hundreds of millions of pieces of space junk, ranging from particles a millimetre across up to disabled satellites, are careering around the Earth. The US Space Command catalogues the larger items to make sure they are not mistaken for enemy missiles; currently about 10,000 items are listed.
The flag may have been based on that of Schwyz, one of the original cantons of the Confederation. While the national flag is square, a rectangular flag is used on Swiss lakes and rivers. Effective date: 12 December 1889.
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