How To Clean Up Space Junk - YouTube

Channel: Veritasium

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On October the fourth, 1957 the first satellite, Sputnik I, was launched into space.
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Although it burned up in the atmosphere three months later, many satellites launched since
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then have not, leaving us with a virtual junk yard orbiting the earth.
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Now those debris represent a real threat to the television communications and GPS satellites,
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not to mention the astronauts.
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But luckily, the Swiss have a plan to clean up space.
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So I have come to Lausanne to figure out how they are going to do it.
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Most of the space junk orbiting earth is within 2000 kilometers of the earth鈥檚 surface.
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There are over 22,000 objects larger than this softball and over half a million larger
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than this marble.
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Now all of the orbiting debris is going about seven to eight kilometers per second, but
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since the objects are moving relative to one another the average speed of a collision is
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about 10 kilometers per second.
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And an object this size going 10 kilometers per second has about the same impact as a
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midsize car going nearly 200 kilometers per hour.
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That is enough force to destroy any satellite in orbit.
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As a veteran of four space flights, Swiss astronaut Claude Nicollier knows the dangers
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first hand.
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>> Only the large debris are tracked.
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By radar we know the orbit exactly and sometimes we have to be a small change in the orbiter
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characteristics that our space ship, the space shuttle...
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>> Space shuttle Endeavor... >>... because it is foreseen that next day
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or two days later we are going to have a close approach with a debris, such that NASA was
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not feeling to good about that and we translated our orbits so to make that distance a little
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bit larger.
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>> Fortunately, to date, there haven鈥檛 been any serious collisions with manned spaced
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craft.
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But in 2009 a single crash between two satellites added a whopping 2000 new pieces of debris.
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>> If we don鈥檛 do anything, space will become soon inaccessible because of the large amount
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of debris and the high risk of collision.
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>> So the Swiss, determined to do something about that problem, are extending their clean
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country reputation into outer space.
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>> The Swiss space center has launched a program called Clean Space One that is a demonstrator
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of the capability to remove debris.
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And the idea is to go and to remove one of two satellites from Switzerland.
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>> One of these two satellites is appropriately named Swiss Cube.
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>> Swiss Cube is a small satellite which you see.
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This is a one to one model.
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So this is in the right scale.
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It belongs to Switzerland.
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So we had to do something about this.
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>> You can鈥檛 have Swiss junk just floating around in space.
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>> No.
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No.
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That is not acceptable.
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>> So the mission for Clean Space One is a proof of concept that a janitor satellite
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can be sent into space to grab a piece of space junk鈥攊n this case Swiss Cube and bring
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it back into the atmosphere where it will burn up.
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To rendezvous with the space junk, the small janitor needs an incredibly efficient engine.
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Working on the challenge is Professor Herbert Shea, an expert in micro mechanics.
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>> This is your propulsion system.
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>> This is our propulsion system.
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Little silicone micro machine chips.
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We use something called electro propulsion, which allows you to emit single atoms with
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a ... that are electrically charged and use an electric field to accelerate them out.
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So you are not burning them.
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You are emitting your propellant.
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And that is what many small satellites use, but nothing has been, to date, been able to
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make something this small.
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So we do zero to 60 miles an hour in a about three days.
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But laughable as it, indeed, seems to all of us, because there is no friction in space,
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or negligible friction, then if we wait six months, we have a huge change in speed.
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And that is how the mission will be done.
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>> Once propelled into the correct orbit, the next challenge is to grab the space junk,
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an object tumbling around uncontrollably without creating more debris.
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>> Our idea is to use a very compliant system.
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Kind of think of an octopus arm.
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An octopus arm is very soft, but it can grab any strange shape and wrap around it and hold
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it.
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And we will have a grabber that looks, in a very ... but that real one will be more
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sophisticated.
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But it looks like this.
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So it is basically very, very soft elastomer.
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I will turn it on in a minute.
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You can see how soft it is.
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And the idea is this will be rolled up so it doesn't take up much room.
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You get into... and it will have 10 of these in a series.
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You get into space, you unroll it.
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And then these things can open when you turn the voltage on.
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You are able to open this and you turn the voltage off and it wraps it around and it
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holds the satellite.
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>> Is this going to be a little bit like those games where you are trying to pick up a stuffed
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toy in the arcade and drop it somewhere?
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Is it going to be like that?
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>> Essentially, yes.
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>> Because those games... those games can be incredibly frustrating with those little
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arms.
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>> They are built to be frustrating.
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>> Whereas this, this is built to be ...
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>> This is built to succeed.
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>> Can I ask?
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Has anyone ever successfully gone up and grabbed a piece of space junk and gotten rid of it?>>
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To my knowledge, no.
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It has never been done before.
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>> And it grabs on.
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>> Ambitious as it may sound, the Swiss know how vast this junk yard is.
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So their ultimate aims are more modest.
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>> Hopefully starting in, say, 2020 to do systematic removal of the large debris at
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the rate of five or more per year in order to contain the increase of the debris density
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in lower earth orbit.
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Then space will continue becoming accessible.
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Of course, the exposure to the space environment
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is a wonderful thing.