space junk

Exploding Russian Space Trash alarms Virginians

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Last night on Sunday, March 29th at 9:45pm- a loud BOOM! in the sky along with streaking pale blue lights prompted a flood of 911 calls from Virginian residents. Aliens? Meteors? Supernatural weather? No. The remnants of a Russian rocket carrying crew and American billionaire Charles Simonyi- the world's first two-time space tourist- to the International Space Station high above the rest of our dozing heads.

Is space tourism the next big thing? Of course it is... its the natural next step. We'll all be taking trips to the moon in no time aboard a luxury liner spaceship. Aren't they building hotels up there right now? Sea voyages aboard the QE2 will be so passe' in 10 years (maybe sooner). However, exploding space junk and rocket remnants raises a bit of a question for the rest of us on Earth. Atomic bomb-sized booms and meteorite-like lights in the sky, signaling trash slamming in to Earth from SPACE.... as if we didn't make enough of our own down here.... poses a bit of a problem, don't you think? Afterall, there is no telling where it will land. The rocket that took off Sunday was lifting off in Kazakhstan.

Though NASA and the U.S. Read more

Orbital Collision Sprays Space Junk Everywhere

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For years now, experts have been warning about the danger of collisions with space junk in Earth orbit. There is so much "stuff" rattling around up there, both working and not, that it is almost inevitable that a collision will occur.

On Tuesday, the first such major collision happened, between an Iridium communications satellite and a Russian satellite. The collision occurred 490 miles above Siberia, and the resulting bits of broken satellite briefly posed a serious threat to the International Space Station, until it was shifted into a higher orbit. The risk to the ISS is now judged as "very small" by a NASA spokesperson.

The American satellite, part of the Iridium Satellite network (used to provide mobile phone service to people who roam outside cell phone networks - for example, to Antarctica), is described as weighing about 1,200 pounds, with a body that was 12 feet long (not counting the various rays and antennas). The Russians have not yet released information about their satellite which was destroyed. Read more

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