Daily Digest | - |
The film 'Gravity' won seven Oscars but more importantly it seems to have sparked renewed interest in the problem of space junk.
‘Space fence’ may help to prevent ‘Gravity’ type satellite disaster
The film “Gravity” won seven Oscars but more
importantly it seems to have sparked renewed interest in the problem of
space junk.
By
Justin Beach, Daily Digest News
Saturday, May 10, 2014
Saturday, May 10, 2014
There is no debate, however, about the problem of space junk. There is also general agreement that the cascading destruction of Earth’s satellites by debris is possible. A 2013 study conducted for the Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordinating Committee found that collisions caused by debris were not only likely, but would rise sharply as human activity in space increases, according to the BBC.
The European Space Agency (ESA) estimates that there are currently 170 million bits of space debris larger than 1 mm. Some of those bits of junk are currently traveling at nearly 35,000 per hour.
In hearings before congress this week, officials from NASA, the FAA and the U.S. military discussed the problem.
“Beside launch and reentry, orbital debris poses the biggest threat to spaceflight,” George Zamka, an official with the Federal Aviation Administration told Congress, according to NBC.
Congress is currently considering a proposal to give a single agency responsibility for monitoring space junk. Currently, the Department of Defense, the Federal Aviation Administration and Federal Communications Commission all track debris independently.
Late last year approval was given for the construction of a new U.S. “space fence.” However, that name is a bit misleading. The fence isn’t really a barrier, it is a high-frequency radar system designed to make it easier to track smaller pieces of debris.
”There’s a lot of stuff up there, and the
impact of the new space fence will be to track more objects and smaller
objects. [Tracking the debris] is a necessity, but not sufficient. We
need to move on to an active plan for removal,” Joan Johnson-Freese, a
professor of national security affairs at the U.S. Naval War College
told the Sydney Morning Herald.
So how do you stop bits of debris moving at
35 times the speed of a bullet? Several ideas have been suggested or are
in the planning and development stages. Most of these involve pushing
the debris down into Earth’s atmosphere to burn up. An overview of some
of the suggestions is available at Space.com.
San Francisco based software engineer Alex Rasmussen has also created this interactive widget showing the location of satellites and space junk.
end quote from:
No comments:
Post a Comment