Worst case scenario is that the satellite disintegrated. But the agency might have also just spotted small pieces of the observatory that came off due to an unfortunate event, such as an explosion or a gas leak. As Chandra astronomer Jonathan McDowell tweeted, "'Debris' doesn't mean Hitomi's in little pieces. It means little pieces have come off it." The satellite could still be intact. After all, JAXA received short signals from Hitomi after the JSpOC spotted those pieces of debris. The agency set up an emergency headquarters headed by JAXA President Naoki Okumura himself to investigate and get to the bottom of the situation.

The Japanese space agency developed Hitomi to be its most powerful X-ray satellite. It's still in the middle of prepping its scientific instruments -- a phase that's supposed to last for three months since it blasted off in February -- and hasn't even started its mission yet. Those instruments include spectrometers so sensitive, they can detect X-ray sources 10 times fainter that what Hitomi's predecessor could spot. If the observatory's still intact (and we're sure JAXA is hoping it is), it will scour the universe for black holes, galaxy clusters and other high-energy phenomena.

We are still trying to recover communication with "Hitomi", and trying to find out the status and causes of this communication failure. — JAXA Web (@JAXA_en) March 28, 2016