Article 6TH69 The risks of ‘space junk’ are clear: what goes up, might well come back down on top of you | Patrick Schröder

The risks of ‘space junk’ are clear: what goes up, might well come back down on top of you | Patrick Schröder

by
Patrick Schröder
from Science | The Guardian on (#6TH69)

As commercial space activity ramps up, detritus from launches poses a risk to active satellites and those of us down on Earth

Last month, people in a small village in Kenya looked to the sky and saw a red glowing ring slowly descending. The half-tonne piece of metal crashed into a nearby thicket with a loud bang, leaving them shaken and perplexed. What was the mysterious object? Was it an alien spacecraft? Sadly, the truth of the matter was much more prosaic: it was a piece of space junk.

The Kenya Space Agency identified the object as a separation ring from a launch rocket. Such objects are usually designed to burn up as they re-enter the Earth's atmosphere or to fall over unpopulated areas, leading the agency to declare this as an isolated case".

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