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Space Junk
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11-21-2006, 11:15 PM
Post: #1
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Space Junk
Map: Space Junk
Garbage zipping through space could shatter a spececraft or crash into Earth. By Elise Kleeman DISCOVER Vol. 27 No. 11 | November 2006 | Space People have been launching objects into space for almost 50 years, creating an ever-expanding orbiting junkyard. The United States now tracks more than 10,000 pieces of debris four inches wide or larger, but tens of millions of smaller fragments are also whizzing through space at speeds that can exceed 17,000 miles per hour, says Mark Matney of NASA's Orbital Debris Program. At such speeds, a collision with even an apple-size object could shatter a spacecraft into hundreds of pieces. ![]() Tens of millions of trash pieces orbiting the Earth. Some of them are zooming faster than 17,000 miles per hour. Click to see a full-size version. (Image courtesy of NASA) 1 BLAME THE RUSSIANS Many of these objectsones that tend to loop in a long oval around Earth's polesare transfer stages from old Russian rockets. Rocket bodies represent about a fifth of cataloged space junk, abandoned satellites another fifth. Functioning spacecraft make up less than a tenth of the orbiting total. 2 NEXT TIME YOU DROP A CALL . . . Think of this ring, which contains geosynchronous satellites that travel with the planet so they always face the same site on Earth. When these stop functioning, their orbits drift into trajectories that can threaten other valuable instruments. Twice a day, the defunct objects tear through working spacecraft. 3 BACKYARD DUMP Near-Earth orbit is crowded with clutter from many scientific missions (like the Hubble Space Telescope), most manned spaceflights, and the International Space Station. The orbiting debris has included a glove and a spatula dropped by space-shuttle astronauts, bags of Mir's garbage, and the Russian radio transmitter in a space suit, SuitSat. 4 AN INTERNATIONAL EFFORT Although the United States and Russia lead the list of space junkers, other top contributors include the European Space Agency, Japan, France, India, and several companies. 5 BEWARE OF FALLING OBJECTS Space agencies continue to monitor the debris as new objects are added every few days (from launches, collisions, and explosions) and old junk falls back through the atmosphere, which happens about once a day. Usually the debris burns up on reentry, but several 100-pound-plus fragments have crashed to Earth. Only one womanin Tulsa, Oklahomais known to have been hit. As of now, there are no regulations controlling the generation of junk, only recommendations about minimizing it. ![]() A crack about 1 millimeter wide in a space shuttle window. This is the result of a collision with a space trash particle about one tenth of a millimeter wide. (Image courtesy of NASA) LINK At this rate it will be impossible to get out of earth's orbit without taking multiple hits. The belief in 'coincidence' is the prevalent superstition of the Age of Science. &I don't understand why you're taking such a belligerant tone when you're obviously the ignorant one here. & -triplesix |
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11-22-2006, 03:56 AM
Post: #2
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Space Junk
1 mm wide crack? The poor whiners. My car windshield takes much bigger stone chips.:(
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11-22-2006, 04:51 AM
Post: #3
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Space Junk
Yea, but in the vacuum of space, it's FATAL !!!
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11-22-2006, 02:00 PM
Post: #4
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Space Junk
I would never have guessed. :crazy:
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12-16-2006, 02:59 PM
Post: #5
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Space Junk
i think this is the last of our worries.
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12-19-2006, 07:42 PM
Post: #6
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Space Junk
in a way, it could eventually work to box us in. imagine launching crafts that get pelted to oblivion before getting out.
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