One Tonne Space Telescope on Course to Collide With Junked Military Satellite Over Northeastern US

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One Tonne Space Telescope on Course to Collide With Junked Military Satellite Over Northeastern US

Observers fear a collision of the two long-dead space objects could spew space junk across a broad area of near space, affecting satellites which are still in operation.

The Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS), a massive 954 kg joint US, Dutch and British space telescope launched in 1983, is plotting a course to collide with GGSE-4 (2828), an experimental 85 kg US Naval Research Laboratory military satellite launched in 1967, space debris tracking service LeoLabs has reported.

In a series of tweets, the California-based monitoring service, which monitors the skies using a series of ground-based radars, explained that the two dead space objects will pass one another as little as 15-30 meters apart over Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania “at a relative velocity of 14.7 km/s,” (i.e. nearly 53,000 km per hour).

“Events like this highlight the need for responsible, timely deorbiting of satellites for space sustainability moving forward,” the monitoring agency noted.

If a collision does occur, any debris heading to Earth would be likely to burn up in the atmosphere. However, the spread of pieces of the two objects to the surrounding area could wreak havoc on surrounding satellites.

Speaking to Science Alert, Flinders University space archeologist Alice Gorman warned the large amount of potential space debris created by a collision make the encounter “one of the most dangerous possible collisions that we’ve seen for some time.”

The issue of space garbage cluttering up our planet’s atmosphere has been growing in importance in recent years as private companies’ plan to launch tens of thousands of internet satellites into orbit over the next several years, with such efforts expected to increase the total number of objects launched into space since the dawning of the space age in 1957 by five times. Last year, Russia’s Roscosmos patented a satellite which self-destructs upon the completion of its service life or in case of an unexpected breakdown.

According to the Russian Defence Ministry, there are currently about 16,000 artificial objects orbiting our planet, with over 85 percent of these objects said to consist of space garbage.

Sourse: sputniknews.com

One Tonne Space Telescope on Course to Collide With Junked Military Satellite Over Northeastern US

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