Everything about Space Junk totally explained
Space debris or
orbital debris, also called
space junk and space waste, are the objects in
orbit around
Earth created by humans, that no longer serve any useful purpose. They consist of everything from entire spent
rocket stages and defunct
satellites to explosion fragments, paint flakes, dust, and slag from solid rocket motors, coolant released by
RORSAT nuclear powered satellites, deliberate insertion of
small needles, and other small particles. Clouds of very small particles may cause erosive damage, like
sandblasting.
Space debris has become a growing concern in recent years, since
collisions at
orbital velocities can be highly damaging to functioning satellites and can also produce even more space debris in the process, called
Kessler Syndrome. Some spacecraft, like the
International Space Station, are now
armored to mitigate damage with this hazard.
Astronauts on EVAs are also vulnerable.
History
In 1958, the United States launched a satellite named
Vanguard I. It became one of the longest surviving pieces of space junk, and
as of March 2008 remains the oldest piece still in orbit.
According to
Edward Tufte's book
Envisioning Information, space debris objects have included a glove lost by astronaut
Ed White on the first American
space-walk, a camera
Michael Collins lost near the spacecraft
Gemini 10, garbage bags jettisoned by the Soviet
Mir Cosmonauts throughout that space station's 15-year life,
Mitigation measures
In order to mitigate the generation of additional space debris, a number of measures have been proposed: The
passivation of spent upper stages by the release of residual fuels is aimed at decreasing the risk of on-orbit explosions that could generate thousands of additional debris objects.
Taking satellites out of orbit at the end of their operational life would also be an effective mitigation measure. This could be facilitated with a "terminator tether," an
electrodynamic tether that's rolled out, and slows down the spacecraft. In cases when a direct (and controlled) de-orbit would require too much fuel the satellite can also be brought to an orbit where atmospheric drag would cause it to de-orbit after some years. Such a maneuver was successfully performed with the French
Spot-1 satellite at the end of 2003. It will re-enter in approximately 15 years.
In orbital altitudes where it wouldn't be economically feasible to de-orbit a satellite, like in the geostationary ring they're brought to a
graveyard orbit where no operational satellites are present.
Proposals have been made for ways to "sweep" space debris back into Earth's atmosphere, including automated tugs,
laser brooms to vaporize or nudge particles into rapidly-decaying orbits, or huge
aerogel blobs to absorb impacting junk and eventually fall out of orbit with them trapped inside. However, currently most effort is being devoted to prevention of collisions by keeping track of larger debris, and prevention of more debris.
Space debris measurements
The
U.S. Strategic Command maintains a catalogue currently containing about 13,000 objects, in part to prevent misinterpretation as hostile missiles. Observation data gathered by a number of ground based
radar facilities and telescopes as well as by a space based telescope is used to maintain this catalogue. Nevertheless, the majority of debris objects remain unobserved. There are more than 600,000 objects larger than 1 cm in orbit (according to the ESA Meteoroid and Space Debris Terrestrial Environment Reference, the MASTER-2005 model).
Other sources of knowledge on the actual space debris environment include measurement campaigns by the
ESA Space Debris Telescope, TIRA, Goldstone radar, Haystack radar, and the
Cobra Dane phased array radar. The data gathered during these campaigns is used to validate models of the debris environment like ESA-MASTER. Such models are the only means of assessing the impact risk caused by space debris as only larger objects can be regularly tracked.
Returned space debris hardware is also a valuable source of information on the (sub
millimetre) space debris environment. The
LDEF satellite deployed by
STS-41-C Challenger and retrieved by
STS-32 Columbia spent 68 months in orbit. The close examination of its surfaces allowed the analysis of the directional distribution and the composition of debris flux. The
EURECA satellite deployed by
STS-46 Atlantis in 1992 and retrieved by
STS-57 Endeavour in 1993 could provide additional insight.
The solar arrays of the
Hubble Space Telescope returned during missions
STS-61 Endeavour and
STS-109 Columbia are an important source of information on the debris environment. The impact craters found on the surface were counted and classified by
ESA to provide another means for validating debris environment models.
Gabbard diagrams
Space debris groups resulting from satellite breakups are often studied using
scatterplots known as Gabbard diagrams. In a Gabbard diagram the
perigee and
apogee altitudes of the individual debris fragments resulting from a collision are plotted with respect to the
orbital period of each fragment. The distribution of the resulting diagram can be used to infer information such as direction and point of impact.
Significant debris-creation events
The largest space debris incident in history was the
Chinese anti-satellite weapon (ASAT) test on January 11, 2007. The event was estimated to have created more than 2300 pieces (updated 12/13/07) of trackable debris (approximately golf ball size or larger), over 35,000 pieces 1cm or larger, and 1 million pieces 1mm or larger. The debris event is more significant than previous ASAT tests in that the debris field is in a higher orbital plane resulting in deorbit times of 35 years and greater. In June 2007, NASA's
Terra environmental spacecraft was the first to be moved in order to prevent impacts from this debris.
An event of similar magnitude occurred on
February 19,
2007, when a Russian
Briz-M booster stage exploded in orbit over Australia. The booster had been launched on
February 28,
2006, carrying an
Arabsat-4A communication satellite but malfunctioned before it could use all of its fuel. The explosion was captured on film by several astronomers, but due to the path of the orbit the debris cloud has been hard to quantify using radar. Although similar in magnitude, the debris field is at a lower altitude than the Chinese ASAT test and much debris re-enters the atmosphere in a relatively short time. As of
February 21,
2007, over 1,000 fragments had been identified. A third breakup event also occurred on 14 February 2007 as recorded by Celes Trak. This makes three observed events in the first two months of 2007. In 2006, the most breakups occurred since 1993 with eight breakups.
Additionally on February 20th, 2008, the U.S. launched an
SM-3 Missile from the
USS Lake Erie specially designed to destroy a defective U.S. spy satellite feared to carry 1,000 pounds of toxic
hydrazine fuel. The debris created by this event occurring at about 250 km altitude results in all the debris having a perigee of 250 km or lower. Although the apogee of some debris may be higher due to the explosion, the low perigee altitude will cause all debris to re-enter the atmosphere in a relatively short time period.
Significant debris impact events
The first verified collision with catalogued space debris occurred in
1996, tearing off a boom from the French satellite
Cerise.
Only one person has ever been recorded hit by manmade space debris: in 1997 an Oklahoma woman was hit in the shoulder by a 10 x 13 cm piece of blackened, woven metallic material that was later confirmed to be part of the fuel tank of a
Delta II rocket which had launched a
U.S. Air Force satellite in 1996. She wasn't injured.
Further Information
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