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Thread: Russian satellite destroyed by Chinese garbage

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    Default Russian satellite destroyed by Chinese garbage

    The Russian satellite destroyed by garbage

    Space junk strikes again
    By Chris Gayomali | March 12, 2013





    An artist's depiction of the moment when a Russian satellite and a piece of Chinese space junk collided.
    Analytical Graphics, Inc.






    A
    few hundreds kilometers outside of Earth's atmosphere is something called the LEO zone, or low-Earth orbit. A stepping stone to the stars, this area is home to hundreds of billions of dollars worth of space equipment — everything from the International Space Station to the Hubble Space Telescope.
    But over the last few years, the LEO zone has gotten increasingly messy, littered with fragments from dispatched rockets and deactivated satellites. Astronomers affectionately refer to this debris as space junk. But even the tiniest scrap can inflict tremendous damage.


    Space.com reports that earlier this year, Russia's Ball Lens In The Space (BLITS) mini-satellite collided with a piece of debris that broke off from a 2007 Chinese anti-satellite test. The crash rendered Russia's spherical lens little more than a giant paperweight.


    BLITS isn't the first piece of space equipment destroyed by indiscriminate debris — similar accidents occurred in 1996, 2007, and 2009. And, as space watchers caution, it surely won't be the last, either.


    "Many satellites in LEO are having to maneuver on a regular basis to avoid threatening close approaches with debris," Brian Weeden, an adviser to the Secure World Foundation, told Space.com in an email. "This is just one more data point that shatters the myth of the 'big sky' theory regarding space activities and shows that debris is one of the most pressing threats satellite operators in LEO have to contend with."


    According to NASA, there are more than 21,000 pieces of orbital debris larger than 10 cm (about the size of a baseball) flying around the sky, and 500,000 between 1 and 10 cm. These pieces can whiz by at speeds up to 17,500 mph, meaning that even tiny chunks are dangerous; a small fleck of paint, for example, can do serious damage to a passing spacecraft, which, of course, puts astronaut lives at risk.


    Last October, in a widely reported case, the ISS — which is covered in protective armor — was forced to swerve to avoid a potential collision with a dangerous chunk of space debris. Six astronauts, including two Americans, were onboard at the time.


    So what's being done to fix our collective mess? NASA does its best to track pieces larger than 10 cm with the U.S. Space Surveillance Network, which uses ground-based radar to paint a roadmap. And for what it's worth, there are all sorts of outlandish proposals to destroy the debris, from Earth-based lasers to probes that drag the junk back into our atmosphere, where it incinerates on re-entry. (Unfortunately, most of these "ideas" are exactly that.)
    When it comes down to it, no one wants to play space janitor. According to some estimates, 29 percent of the junk is American, 37 percent is Russian, and 28 percent is Chinese. Add in the fact that cleanup is expensive — one project for a "Space Fence" proposed by the U.S. Air Force would cost approximately $1 billion — and we're left with governments that would rather turn a blind eye than foot the bill.
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: Russian satellite destroyed by Chinese garbage

    Russian satellite hit by remnants of destroyed Chinese spacecraft
    by Staff Writers

    Moscow (Voice of Russia) Mar 12, 2013


    File image.
    A small Russian spacecraft in orbit appears to have been struck by remnants of a destroyed Chinese satellite. It's just the second time in history that an active spacecraft has collided with an artificial object while in orbit.


    The collision took place between Russia's Ball Lens in the Space (BLITS) spacecraft and China's Fengyun 1C satellite, according to the Center for Space Standards and Innovation (CSSI), based in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The collision appears to have occurred on January 22, although it took over a month to determine what exactly hit the craft.


    The Chinese material is considered to be "space junk" left over from when the Chinese craft was destroyed in a 2007 anti-satellite demonstration when the Fengyun 1C was intentionally demolished after exceeding its service life. The debris has posed a threat to satellites and crewed spacecraft ever since, according to Space.com.


    The space collision involving BLITS was first reported on February 4 by Russian scientists Vasiliy Yurasov and Andrew Nazarenko, of the Institute for Precision Instrument Engineering (IPIE) in Moscow. They reported a "significant change" in the orbit of the BLITS satellite to CSSI, as well as changes in the spacecraft's spin velocity and altitude.


    "As a result, an abrupt change occurred to the BLITS orbit parameters (a decrease of the orbiting period)," ILRS officials said. The BLITS spin period changed from 5.6 seconds before collision to 2.1 seconds after collision. The craft also experienced a sudden decrease of 120 meters in the semi-major axis of its orbit.


    While the BLITS satellite weighs 7.5kg, the weight of the piece that struck it may only be around .08 grams. BLITS is a retroreflector demonstration satellite built for precision satellite laser-ranging experiments. It was launched in 2009 and expected to last five years in space.


    It remains unclear whether the satellite is merely damaged or completely non-functioning.


    The collision marks the second time that an active spacecraft has collided with another artificial object in space. In February 2009, a US communications satellite was hit by a defunct Russian military satellite, creating a large debris cloud in orbit.
    Libertatem Prius!


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