The Truth About Space Debris - YouTube

Channel: Real Engineering

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This episode of Real Engineering is brought to you by CuriosityStream, watch over 2,400
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documentaries for free for 31 days at curiositystream.com/realengineering.
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On March 27th 2019, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced to the world that
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India had conducted its first successful anti-satellite test.
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Launching a three-stage missile from Abdul Kalam island on the north-eastern coast of
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India, with a trajectory taking it over the Bay of Bengal.
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A trajectory that would eventually lead to it intercepting India’s military satellite,
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Microsat-R, 283 kilometres overhead.
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The seven hundred and forty-kilogram satellite met its end when the kinetic kill vehicle
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ploughed through it.
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Shattering it into hundreds of pieces which proceeded to spread in earth’s orbit.
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The test was universally condemned.
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A completely unnecessary political posturing move that added significantly to Earth’s
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growing space debris problem.
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This isn’t some far off distant problem that we need to worry about, and the probability
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of collisions occurring is not only continually rising, but there have already been several
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collision events that have damaged the international space station and other high-value satellites.
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We can’t blame the current state of affairs entirely on anti-satellite tests like this.
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Every single time we launch into space we generate some sort of unwanted waste.
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Solid-fuel rockets deposit aluminium-oxide particles.
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Explosive bolts fragment into pieces.
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Even chips of paint can cause issues.
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In 1983 the Challenger space shuttle was struck by a 0.2 mm chip of paint that managed to
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gouge this pit out of one of its windows.
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In fact, in the first 67 Space Shuttle launches 177 impacts were found in the windows.
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45 of which were large enough to warrant a replacement window.
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Post-mission analysis determined all of these impacts we caused by space debris, with 44%
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being caused by aluminium alloys, 37% by paint chips, 12% by steel, 5% by copper and 2% by
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titanium.
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At fifty thousand dollars a pop, this did not come cheap.
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Based on these numbers, the Space Shuttle had 67% chance of impact causing significant
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damage to the windows during their 10 day missions, and these probabilities have only
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risen over time.
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In 2007 the likelihood of a collision between any satellite in low earth orbit and a piece
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of debris over 1 centimeter in size was 17-20% in a single year.
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[2] That statistic increased to 25-33% later that year when China tested their own anti-satellite
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missile.
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By 2010 the chance of a 1-centimetre piece of debris striking a satellite had increased
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to 50% a year, after two full-sized satellites Iridium 33, a US communications satellite,
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and Kosmos 2251, a retired Russian communications satellite, collided at 42,000 kilometres per
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hour.
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Obliterating both satellites and producing over 1000 fragments over 10 centimetres in
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size, and many more too small to be tracked.
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So the chances of collision are not small by any measure, they are common and it’s
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only a matter of time before another serious incident like this 2009 collision occurs again,
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so it is prudent that we design satellites to be capable of not only withstanding small
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impacts but be capable of dodging larger ones.
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The ISS, for example, is designed to withstand objects up to 1 centimetre in size [3], and
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can dodge larger trackable objects 10 centimetres wide.
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The biggest danger to the occupants of the ISS are objects in between these sizes.
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That are untrackable but large enough to cause serious damage to the international space
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station.
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When the ISS was being planned, NASA laid out a basic risk management policy.
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That the probability of any critical component of the ISS being penetrated by space debris
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would be less than 19% over 10 years.
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[4][5] A critical component is characterized by anything that could potentially lead to
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a loss of life if it is damaged, and designers are careful to correctly categorise each component
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on the ISS to ensure this is the case, which often involves performing hypervelocity impact
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test here on earth.
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This resulted in things like batteries and ammonia accumulators being categorized as
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non-critical when they didn’t explode during tests, and so received less shielding that
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other critical components.
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Space debris is just a fact of everyday life on the ISS that astronauts need to be aware
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of.
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To get a better sense of what it’s like living with this.
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I spoke with former ISS commander Chris Hadfield on the phone.
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When you are onboard a spaceship you have a constant undercurrent awareness of the ever
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prevalent risk of something hitting your spaceship and causing a leak.
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Sort of like when you are driving a car, you always know at some point you could have some
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kind of accident.
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Yo u know, It’s not heavy on your mind.
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You know it happens.
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You know the odds are that eventually it will happen for sure, and you just have to find
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a way to live with it.
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And so the way we live with it is to understand the risk as accurately as we can.
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We know the statistics.
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We know the relatively risk of man made debris versus naturally occurring debris, and we
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know how the space station is designed to resist it with the multilayer shielding, and
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then we also have procedures.
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So let’s talk about that shielding first.
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Shielding the ISS with heavy plates, as tanks do here on earth, is not an option.
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This is the damage a 13-millimetre spherical bullet will do to a 18-centimetre aluminium
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plate when travelling at 7 kilometres per second.
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It prevented penetration and only just managed to prevent a large chunk of spall to break
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off from the interior surface.
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At 13 centimetres a 1 metre squared aluminium plate like this would weigh about 338 kilograms.
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When the ISS started construction in 1998 the per kilo cost to launch to the International
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Space Stations orbit using the Space Shuttle was about 93,400 dollars.
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[7] Placing a 1 metre squared shield like this at a cost of 31.5 million dollars.
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This is an extremely inefficient use of material, and the ISS uses something much more elegant
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called a Whipple shield.
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The Whipple shield uses the debris’ own velocity to stop it.
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At 4 kilometres per second and higher, the energies involved are so immense that the
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projectile itself breaks apart and vaporises on impact.
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[8] Whipple shields take advantage of this by creating a shield that is composed of several
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thin sheets of armour separated by space.
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So when a meteoroid or debris does strike it, it first breaks up into thousands of smaller
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superheated fragments.
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Thereby spreading the energy of the impact over a larger area for the following shield
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layer.
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The European Space Agency conducted tests of their kevlar Whipple shields which protect
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their ATV vehicle.
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They did this by shooting a 7.5 mm diameter aluminium bullet at 7 kilometres per second,
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which tore straight through the kevlar shield, but left only a scorch mark on the 3-millimetre
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aluminium wall behind it.
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These kind of impacts occur fairly frequently and as Chris Hadfield told me during the call:
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If you just sit quietly by the wall of the space station and wait a while, you can hear
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things hit your ship.
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And that’s kind of an interesting thing.
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It doesn’t happen too often and sometimes all you are hearing is the vehicle cooling
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and heating in the sun, so you are hearing the natural popping of metal expanding or
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contracting, but occasionally you hear just like the sound of a small bullet or high speed
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stone banging into the thin aluminum hull of your ship
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So astronauts are occasionally reminded of the space debris problem, and have to be careful
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not to cut their suits while on space walks on sharp impact edges.
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While this is a highly effective form of shielding that minimises the weight of shielding needed,
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it is only effective for smaller debris.
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Larger particles would tear right through this shield, and for those circumstances,
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the ISS and other satellites literally have to dodge the incoming shrapnel.
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Ground-based radar like the Haystack Radar are the main source of spatial data we have
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on space debris.
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It is an X-band radar system that simple stares at selected points in space and waits for
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debris to pass through its radar beam.
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[12] This gives us size, speed and direction information, which is fed into a database
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that allows NASA and other space agencies around the world to predict potential collisions.
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When a collision is predicted maneuvres can be planned to allow the international space
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station to dodge it, but these maneuvres come with a cost, and mission control needs to
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assess if the risk is worth that cost.
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They start by drawing an imaginary box around the international space station.
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50 kilometres squared and point seven five kilometres deep.
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This acts as an exclusion zone and any tracked debris that passes through it will send an
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alert to mission control.
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From there careful risk analysis begins.
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If there is a one in ten thousand to one in one hundred thousand chance of collision the
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ISS receives a yellow warning.
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[14]Which means flight controllers must perform avoidance maneuvres if they do not interfere
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with mission objectives.
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This can be as simple as interfering with microgravity experiments to forcing the Soyuz
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to miss a launch window.
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If there is a greater than one in ten thousand risk [14], then a red warning is received
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and the international space station must take action.
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Control momentum gyros can be used to alter the stations orientation, while thrusters
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on the Zvezda module or on docked vehicles can be used to provide the necessary acceleration.
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Boosting to a higher orbit requires expensive propellant, but the ISS already needs to perform
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reboosts every few months to maintain its orbit, so these dodging maneuvers will just
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alter the scheduling of these already needed boost burns.
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These exclusion zones exist for all satellites in NASA’s database and on March 29th 2012,
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Julie McEnery (hup the Irish) the project scientist for the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope
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received an automated email alert.
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Informing her of a predicted incursion between Fermi and Cosmos 1805, a retired Russian spy
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satellite, where the two would pass within 700 feet of each other.
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The decision on what to do with this information was left to her, and the lessons learned from
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the previous satellite collision were not lost on her.
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In order to ensure they did not collide Fermi would need to rotate away from its view of
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the sky to point its thrusters in the direction of travel.
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It then performed a 1-second burn that would separate the two satellites crossing temporally.[15]
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These thrusters had not been tested before, as they were designed to take the satellite
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out of orbit at the end of its life, and so there was significant anxiety within the team
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that they could malfunction and end Fermi’s mission prematurely.
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Thankfully that did not happen, and Fermi continues to give us valuable information
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about the Universe to this day.
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These issues are only going to grow as human activities in space grows, and it’s time
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we began thinking more seriously about how we manage our cosmic neighbourhood.
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Mainstream media tends to incredibly alarmist about this issue.
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“So all of that is debris that you are looking at there, so your concern for debris is well
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placed.
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We maybe putting so much debris is space that we will close ourselves off from space travel
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because of the dangers it would take to get through our own garbage heap.
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Space debris, obviously does not look like this, the vast majority of it is too small
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to see.
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Occasionally we have massive debris, like the upper stage of Apollo 12s Saturn V rocket,
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which is still in orbit and expected to return to earth in the next couple of decades, but
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this material is easy to dodge.
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After all, space is a big place.
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We are not going to be trapped on the planet, we are not going to lose all technology related
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to satellites.
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Even now, just a few weeks after India’s anti-satellite test, a decent amount of the
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debris will have drifted back to earth.
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We can take Operation Burnt Frost, the US’s own anti-satellite test in 2008, as proof
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of this.
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There were multiple similarities between this and India’s own test, with similar orbits
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and altitudes.
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Data from the Combined Space Operations Centre shows that the majority of the debris from
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this test had fallen back to earth within 2 months, while other pieces that managed
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to be ejected into higher orbits eventually return to earth about 2 years later [1]
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This was just the larger trackable debris.
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Smaller debris decays faster as it has a larger area to mass ratio, making them more sensitive
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to atmospheric drag.
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Even in orbit, molecules do exist that collide with satellites and debris, causing them to
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lose slow down and lose altitude.
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This isn’t a reason to ignore the problem.
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If the problem continues to grow as our space activities grow, the potential loss in money
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from damaging collisions and the potential chain reaction this could cause in a busy
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earth orbit is going to motivate efforts to fix the problem.
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It’s not just the cost of the satellite that will motivate efforts.
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Entire economies have been built upon the services they provide.
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International treaties dictating space operations need to be updated to mitigate the issue,
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ensuring any satellite placed in Earth orbit will be required to be capable of bringing
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itself out of orbit and be capable of dodging debris when needed.
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As we saw earlier with Fermi this is a feature of some satellites, but not all.
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Some satellites simply become giant bullets when they retire.
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This cannot be allowed to continue.
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This alone will not be enough to ensure space debris is kept to a reasonable level, and
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active clearance may be needed if trends continue.
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Launching more objects into orbit to solve the problem seems to me to be a very expensive
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and ineffective way to deal with the problem.
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Someone will have to fund it, which will be difficult as most companies want to add things
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to space not remove them.
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Not only that, but it will also add to the space debris problem with the natural bi-products
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of launches, while only being capable of taking down large objects.
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A more promising technology will involve using high power lasers that will be powerful enough
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to ablate material from the object, which will provide thrust to slow its orbit and
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thus increase its rate of decay.
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There are issues with a technology like this, as it could be used as an anti-satellite weapon
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which would not sit well with other space faring nations.
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To overcome that it would need to be a joint venture between all space faring nations.
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[17] Just as the ISS became an international effort to unite mankind, cleaning up our cosmic
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neighbourhood can also become a uniting problem.
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International cooperation and rivalries have long been the driving force for advancement
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in the field of aerospace.
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World War 1 and 2 advanced aviation at a unprecedented rate, and it’s conclusion led to an international
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race to the moon.
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If you want to learn more about this troubled birth of aerospace.
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I highly recommend watching this documentary titled “Pioneers in Aviation” on curiositystream.
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It will take you from the early years of the Wright Brothers to the foundation of the Boeing
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and Douglas Aircraft Companies through the difficult years of the great depression and
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the rapid advancement during the world wars, culminating in the space race.
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You can watch all 3 hours of this 3 part series for free, by signing up to curiositystream
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