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[June Theme Report] Space Pollution

by Polina Postnikova | 30-06-2023 23:02 recommendations 0

Any piece of equipment or debris left in space by humans is known as space rubbish or space debris. It can be used to describe large objects like satellites that have failed or failed and were left in orbit after their missions. It can also be used to describe tiny objects like paint flecks or debris that have fallen off a rocket.

Every piece of space junk is a product of Earth-launched items that stay in orbit until they re-enter the atmosphere.

Some objects can return fast in lower orbits of a few hundred kilometers. After a few years, they frequently re-enter the atmosphere and, for the most part, burn up, preventing them from reaching the ground. But at greater altitudes of 36,000 km, where communications and weather satellites are frequently deployed in geostationary orbits, trash or satellites left behind can continue to circle the Earth for hundreds or even thousands of years.

On July 24, 1996, a component of the upper stage of a European Ariane rocket collided with Cerise, a French microsatellite, becoming the first collision between a functioning satellite and a piece of space junk. Despite being hurt, Cerise was still able to function. Iridium 33, a communications satellite owned by the American company Motorola, collided with Cosmos 2251, an inactive Russian military communications satellite, on February 10, 2009, about 760 km (470 miles) above northern Siberia, shattering both satellites. This collision was the first to destroy an operational satellite.

All businesses are required by the United Nations to remove their satellites from orbit within 25 years of the completion of their mission. However, because satellites can malfunction—and frequently do—it is difficult to enforce this. Numerous businesses from around the world have developed creative methods to address this issue.

Sources:

1. What is space junk and why is it a problem? | Natural History Museum 

2. https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/news/orbital_debris.html 

 

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2 Comments

  • Yewon Mentor says :
    Hello Polina! This is your mentor Yewon.

    Before I start, I apologize for the late comment.

    You have written a report about space pollution, which was our theme for June!
    I didn't know that the first collision between a satellite and space junk happened in 1996.
    I hope more technologies and measures will be developed so that we can solve this problem!

    Thank you for your meaningful report! Great job!
    Posted 27-08-2023 05:09

  • James Mentor says :
    Hello Polina!! This is your mentor James.

    For your theme report, you've illustrated the main causes of space pollution and its calamitous consequences. Among the aftermaths of constant debris accumulation, I think the increased risk of collisions during future missions and expeditions is the most detrimental effect. As you've mentioned, presently operational satellites may also collide with the fragments, which would harass its functions of information transmittance, just like the French microsatellite, Cerise.

    Thanks for writing such a meaningful report! Great work.
    Posted 13-07-2023 10:24

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