U.S. and Russian Satelites Collide In Space

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The Effen Gee

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Russian and US satellites collide



Iridium spacecraft provide satellite phone services

US and Russian communications satellites have collided in space in what is thought to be the biggest incident of its kind to date.

The US commercial Iridium spacecraft hit a defunct Russian satellite at an altitude of about 800km (500 miles) over Siberia on Tuesday, Nasa said.
The risk to the International Space Station and a shuttle launch planned for later this month is said to be low.
The impact produced a cloud of debris, which will be tracked into the future.

Since the Soviets launched Sputnik in 1957, it is estimated about 6,000 satellites have been put in orbit.
Satellite operators are all too aware that the chances of a collision are increasing.


The space station does have the capability of doing a debris-avoidance manoeuvre if necessary


John Yembrick
Nasa spokesman

The Americans are now following the debris path from the impact. It is hoped that most of it will fall to Earth and burn up in the atmosphere.

Shuttle launch

The concern is whether the debris will spread and pose any risk to the ISS, which is orbiting the Earth some 435km below the course of the collision.
According to the Washington Post, a Nasa memo said officials determined the risk to be "elevated" but have estimated it as "very small and within acceptable limits".


SPACE DEBRIS

Around 17,000 objects tracked in space
Monitored by the US Space Surveillance Network
Nasa says four other cases of minor collisions in orbit
ISS has had to manoeuvre away from debris eight times



Nasa spokesman John Yembrick said the ISS had the "capability of doing a debris-avoidance manoeuvre if necessary".
He said this had happened on just eight previous occasions during the course of its 60,000-plus orbits.

Officials said there were no plans to delay the launch of Nasa's space shuttle Discovery later this month, although that would be re-evaluated in coming days.

Nicholas Johnson, an orbital debris expert at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, was quoted by the Associated Press as saying that the Hubble Space Telescope and Earth-observing satellites at higher orbits and closer to the collision site were at greater risk of damage.

'Extremely unusual'

Communications firm Iridium, based in Bethesda, Maryland, said it "lost an operational satellite" after it was struck on Tuesday by the Russian satellite.
It said its clients may experience some brief outages until it had temporarily fixed the problem by Friday.
Iridium said it hoped to replace the 560kg satellite, launched in 1997, with one of its in-orbit spares within the next 30 days.


The firm described it as an "extremely unusual, very low-probability event", stressing that it was not caused by any fault on its part.
Russia's space forces confirmed the collision with the defunct 950kg (2,094lb) satellite.
"A collision occurred between an Iridium 33 satellite and a Russian Kosmos 2251 military satellite," Major General Alexander Yakushin said.
The satellite was launched in 1993 and ceased to function two years later, he said according to the AFP news agency.
Russia has not commented on claims the satellite was out of control.

Littered orbit

Space debris experts say the chances of such collisions have been rising.


A reconstruction showing how the satellites may have collided

Litter in orbit - caused in part by the break-ups of old satellites - has increased to such an extent that it is now the biggest threat to a space shuttle in flight.
Mr Johnson said that at the beginning of this year about 17,000 manmade pieces of debris were orbiting Earth.
The items, some as small as 10cm (four inches), are tracked by the US Space Surveillance Network - sending information to help spacecraft operators avoid the debris.

Of the 6,000 satellites sent into orbit since 1957, about 3,000 remain in operation, according to Nasa.
Europe has just initiated its own space surveillance programme. One of its main weather satellites had a near miss in December with a Chinese object.

The Europeans knew nothing about the threat until the Americans contacted the European Space Agency to inform it of the danger.





hxxp://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7885051.stm


...:holysheep::rofl:
 
Space is not a junkyard if they put it up there and it no longer operates they should be responsible and bring them down to earth. What happens if debris does fall and is not totally incinerated during reentry. We should sue.
 
someone needs to write a letter to Dmitri over there in russia and tell him to get his broken shi* out of orbit before it cost me more tax money
 
This is the typical route of mankind, pollute the land and air and sea now the satellite orbits.

:peace:
 
PoppedAlung said:
someone needs to write a letter to Dmitri over there in russia and tell him to get his broken shi* out of orbit before it cost me more tax money

Oh GOD.

Worried about taxes? Worry about us, not russia guy. Next time I hear somebody complain about taxes, especially where the complaint is 100% unfounded and RETARDED, Imma going to the rooftop with my R700....and more than a few rounds.

Since when do US taxpayer dollars go to cleaning up space?
Since when is russia not allowed to have military satelites and we are?
...and who is going to clean up the mess from the US bases Iridium satelite?

We, america, has more crap in space than anyone else, like TV? Satelites. Use a cellphone, satelites. Bomb 3rd world countries...satelites.

Stop crying about money and ENJOY the progress.
 
A few of my friends are all worried about the falling debris. I figure it's better to just burn one and watch the fireworks. If the debris hits me........I'm going out with a smile on my face. If they would only put all the money into the medicinal properties of mj that they put into the space program, we'd all be better off. Not one of us on this planet will ever be able to live on another planet. We need to keep this one GREEN!
 

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