Space Station & Shuttle Evade Debris 151
T.Hobbes writes: "There's an article at the BBC about the shuttle had to take evasive maneuvers to avoid the close (5km) transit of some rocket debris, and how the fuel consumed has cut short the shuttle's stay in orbit by one day. NASA also has an article about it." I know that minor maneuvers are common, but this one seems like a rather major move. Anyone want to bet on how long it will be before we have to establish some sort of clean-up effort in space?
Re:Why not build some garbage cleaning satellites. (Score:1)
Yeah, why not? :-P (Score:1)
Just borrow Phobos and send it around backwards (Score:2)
Of course, it might take a bit of time and money to move that many gigatonnes of rock, but then it's always harder to fix stuff than to muck it up.
They were moving the ISS, not just the shuttle (Score:5, Informative)
Re:They were moving the ISS, not just the shuttle (Score:3, Interesting)
Simple question: What happens if they spot a piece of junk heading at them when a shuttle isn't docked?
Obviously they would have this covered. The options I can think of are:
Re:They were moving the ISS, not just the shuttle (Score:1, Troll)
Other countries must have thought of this I presume. If all relies on getting a space shuttle up there it's just a matter of waiting untill bad weather prevents the shuttle to launch in time
Re:They were moving the ISS, not just the shuttle (Score:1, Troll)
What do you mean these solutions are not sure? Are you a technical expert on the matter or just bashing the Russian space technology and expertise?
If it's the latter one, I'd strongly suggest you consider the fact that Soviet Union/Russia is the only country that managed to maintain a working space station in orbit for decades, provided most of the low-cost heavy lifting for ISS building and is currently edging ahead of NASA and ESA when it comes to commercialising space and good PR.
Re:They were moving the ISS, not just the shuttle (Score:2, Funny)
Re:They were moving the ISS, not just the shuttle (Score:5, Informative)
As for the Russian modules, their propulsion gear was strictly for boost and initial docking and attitude control until the other modules arrived. The Progress couldn't tap into any residual fuel because there's no piping to hook up (that I know of)
Re:They were moving the ISS, not just the shuttle (Score:2, Informative)
Simple question: What happens if they spot a piece of junk heading at them when a shuttle isn't docked?
The Station uses it's own thrusters. They use the Shuttle's when it's docked to save station fuel. This is pretty much the same reason that they use the Shuttle for the "Re-boost" operations. They'd already done 3 of those this flight, now the emergency maneuvers. I can see why they had to cut the flight a day short.
Re:They were moving the ISS, not just the shuttle (Score:1)
Duh! (Score:3, Funny)
Not as easy as you think (Score:5, Informative)
That's what you get when you leave your garbage in orbit! ... I dunno what they were thinking.
As with most issues in the space program, this is not as simple as it sounds. The debris in question is an old Soviet-era rocket booster, which travels into orbit along with whatever payload it's carrying. Unless some action is taken, it will circle the earth for hundreds of years until the extremely rareified upper atmosphere creates enough drag to bring it down. In order to remove these objects from orbit, you would have to install a retro-rocket system to bring it down on command, which would introduce complexity and cost quite a lot of weight. The debris has to come down somewhere, and if the de-orbiting device malfunctions, it will come down over Chicago rather than some isolated patch of the Pacific. Furthermore, most of the debris that people are worried about are not huge boosters, but tiny rice-grain-sized specs, which are impossible to track and account for.
Re:Not as easy as you think (Score:3, Interesting)
We actually have (at least) two usefull technologies for cleaning up space: tethers [tethers.com] and wake shields [uh.edu]. I don't know if the SVEC folks have considered building a wake shield specifically for NEO cleanup, though.
Re:Not as easy as you think (Score:1)
Space.com article (Score:4, Informative)
"Deadly Litter" (Score:3, Informative)
I could easily believe that someone wrote about the problem before that.
Deadly Litter (c) 1964 by James White,
ISBN 0-345-29640-0
A.
This is cool (Score:1, Funny)
Re:This is cool (Score:1, Troll)
Why would anyone WANT to be reminded of the movie Armegeddon?
how long? (Score:1)
how long? i'd guess now is an excellent time to start thinking about it. I read there is quite a problem [animatedsoftware.com] already. But like most things, if mankind can figure a way out of it, or better, around it in this instance, I'm sure we will. Then some day something BIG will crash up there, and then all of a sudden people will do something about it (a la airport security)
Re:how long? (Score:1)
Discover had an article about this just recently (Score:3, Informative)
You need funding to clean up space. (Score:3, Flamebait)
Re:You need funding to clean up space. (Score:2)
Where would you put your money?
Better orderly mess than messy order (Score:2, Informative)
/penhead
Re:Better orderly mess than messy order (Score:1)
Star wars (Score:2, Funny)
Yahiko
Quark - United Galaxy Sanitation Patrol (Score:1)
A very hard task (Score:1)
Keep the Universe clean! (Score:1)
Space Junk (Score:5, Insightful)
Space junk by itself isn't too bad. It's just some stuff that's floating around Earth's orbit.
The problem is that this space junk will collide with other space junk, leading to smaller, faster moving pieces of junk. This small, undetectable junk will smack into good equipment, leading to even more space junk. Before you know it, there's a chain reaction, and near earth orbit becomes an unsuitable wasteland of high velocity particles.
Just what we don't need.
And trust me, it's one thing to get and send down a spent rocket. It's a bit harder to remove a few thousand small shards of aluminum, paint and ceramic.
There is an immediate need to de-orbit as much space junk as possbile.
Re:Space Junk (Score:3, Funny)
This scenario sounds like a certain late-70's video game. We can effectively solve this problem by installing a hyperspace button on every spacecraft. You just have to assign one of the crew members sit near the button at all times and look out for incoming debris.
Re:Space Junk (Score:2)
thank you
Re:Space Junk (Score:1)
Two slow moving objects colliding can generate small fragments that shoot off at high speed. Imagine two trains colliding with daffy duck tied onto one train. Even if the relative speed of the trains is only 10 mph, it is possible that some daffy guts will squirt out at a high speed perpendicular angle.
Are there any numbers for the distribution of particles over speed, mass, size, and height?
Rings? (was Re:Space Junk) (Score:1)
Clean up effort (Score:1)
My guess of a time for cleanup... (Score:1)
Personally, I don't think it is needed for a long time. First of all, more communications will probably be moved down to earth using high-flying aircrafts over longer time, unless somebody (Like the guys who use microwaves and laser to fire stuff into the sky) with a cheaper launch technique succeeds. Secondly, its not actually THAT big a problem, and a clean up effort will most likely be a major undertaking. I bet it's cheaper to protect and move spacecraft away from the trash rather than removing it.
IF they were to do a cleanup, I bet it would be when space finaly is commericialised, and more spacestations and flights are run. My guess of a timescope? 75-150 years. We can do it today, bu it cost to much, just like normal flight back in the yearly 20th century. Ne technology is being developed that may change all of this. Again, I love the idea of using laser to fire off a craft, imaging a solar powered launch facility using solid-state lasers, cheap, clean and efficent.
My guess would be using small drones flying around on solar power, just pushing the trash down into the atmosphere.
Mvh:
- Knut S.
Ya know... (Score:5, Funny)
Talisman
Re:Ya know... (Score:2)
The problem they currently face with that is detection. When a chicken Mc-Nugget -sized debris (actually, chicken Mc-Nugget are debris by themselves) is coming at you at 50 000kph, it's hard to detect it before it hits you.
And to detect them long enough for a relatively weak laser (unlike Lucas') to burn them is another problem.
Re:Ya know... (Score:1)
Re:Ya know... (Score:1)
It would seems with things the size of bolts, straps, gloves, torque wrenches, etc that you could safely depend on them burning up in the atmosphere instead of crashing into an inhabited area.
Space Invaders (Score:3, Interesting)
Not quite space invaders, but it would give a career path for alot of those video gamers out there.p.Although, gamers would tear their hair out trying to get used to the inherent latency of a spacecraft flying from orbit.
Re:Space Invaders (Score:1)
Re:Space Invaders (Score:2)
Well, anything that had enough surfac area/sail area would slow down fast as it is.
Otherwise you need to either hit it with something that would slow it down substantially, or else you go and scoop it up. Things like errant gloves, wrenches, Nuts, bolts, etc.
then you could take the bag and throw that towards the earth to burn up
Re:Space Invaders (Score:1)
Actually, we could use those nifty ion drives (like on Deep Space 1) and some really good AI to push much of the larger debris back into the atmosphere.
Target Practice (Score:1)
Re:Target Practice (Score:1)
I thought there was a space cleanup project (Score:4, Informative)
I remember a huge segment on it from the show "beyond 2000" (the best tv show discovery ever had, and the morons cancelled it replacing it with a ton of animal crap)
Re:I thought there was a space cleanup project (Score:1)
INCORRECT! The best show Discovery ever had (and still has) is "Walking with Prehistoric Beasts."
If you haven't walked with the beasts, you haven't lived.
Deflectors (Score:2, Flamebait)
It's shocking that the space industry is so affected by simple debris. It's a wonder one of the middle eastern countries have not tried to build orbital rockets whose only purpose is to blow up when they get there. They have lots of money and their engineers are not incompetent. One properly armed missle could create a whole cascade effect. It's would totally devistate our economy and take out spy and targeting satelites all at once. There might be secret lasers or particle cannons in space that might be able to hit rockets but they could always say they are launching a satelite. Scary how vulnerable we are.
Re:Deflectors (Score:2)
Re:Deflectors (Score:2)
Re:Deflectors (Score:1)
There's several problems with this. One is just how vast space is. Even in a low earth orbit you are talking about distances that are much larger than on the Earth. Suppose you did turn a whole rocket into debris. Most of the debris from the explosion would immediately deorbit to the Earth. The fraction of the original mass which stayed up would have to spread out enough to cover a good-sized area, or else it would present such a small target that the chance of it hitting anything would be extremely small. Even when the debris is out there, it would be very likely to miss any spacecraft, unless you sent up a few dozen of these things.
The second, major issue is cost. I did a little searching and found here [nasa.gov] that launches cost around $20,000 per pound for a 400 pound launch. That means that the entire 400 pound payload would cost around $8 million.
Now, with the World Trade Center disaster as an example you can see that far more damage could be done far more inexpensively. For an investment which was probably in the several hundred thousand dollar range (including food, housing, training, travel, of all the terrorists), they were able to kill 5,000 people, cause damage which is in the billions, and disturb an entire world. If they sent up 400 pounds worth of shrapnel they might eventually take out a satellite or spacecraft and cause damage in the few hundred million, along with 4 or 5 lives - all for the cost of $8 million a shot (assuming that one is enough). Which choice would you make? :)
natural debris (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the problems that we humans have is over estimating our importance in the cosmic sphere - the universe hardly notices us - indeed the Earth hardly notices us; from low earth orbit it is very difficult to see anything that man has done on the Earth.
The space station - because of its size - has about 1/2 lb of drag due to the nascent atmosphere 250 miles up. This drag is why experiments in the station are referred to as "micro gravity" instead of "zero g"; there is a tiny gravitational field due to the drag. One of the reasons for the periodic shuttle trips is to reboost the space station to make up for the lost velocity from the residual drag.
Re:natural debris (Score:2)
Re:natural debris (Score:4, Informative)
It most certainly does [nasa.gov]. Check your facts.
> and why it wasn't placed in a geosync
Geosync is the most crowded orbital position we have. This is the last place you want to be if you are trying to avoid junk. Check your facts.
> or a higher circular orbit.
As it stands the shuttle is strained to the limit to get to the station. Infact Columbia (the heaviest of the four shuttles) can't reach the station [space.com] where it is. Move it any higher, and you wouldn't be able to get to it. Check your facts.
Re:natural debris (Score:2, Insightful)
> This is the last place you want to be if you are trying to avoid junk.
> Check your facts.
Geosync may be crowded, but the space junk problem is not nearly as severe up there. There are a couple reasons why:
1. The density of small non-trackable debris (i.e. rivets, bolts, metal pieces from booster separation) is _much_ lower than in low-Earth orbit. The small debris causing events happen much lower -- possibly enroute to Geosync.
2. The distribution of relative velocites between spacecraft is much narrower (and hence better for survivability) since the purpose of Geosync is to effectively "park" a spacecraft over a fixed point on the equator. So everything is travelling in pretty much the same direction at the same velocity. In low-Earth orbit there is crap flying every which way.
Re:natural debris (Score:2, Insightful)
> As it stands the shuttle is strained to the limit to get to the station. Infact Columbia (the heaviest of the four shuttles) can't reach the station [space.com] where it is. Move it any higher, and you wouldn't be able to get to it. Check your facts.
Actually, the ISS's original planned orbit would have allowed all of the shuttles to reach it, and they would have been able to carry much more cargo than they can now. When russia became involved in ISS's construction, the orbit of the system was changed so that Russia's weaker rockets could barely reach it. The problem is that the final orbit is not an optimal orbit for the shuttle and as a result they can't carry as big of a load, and columbia can barly make it at all.
Re:natural debris (Score:3, Informative)
Height is not the problem at all, Columbia can easily reach the current altitude of the ISS. What Columbia can't easily do is reach the orbit of the ISS. The two sound the same, but they aren't really. To explain: (highly simplified)
A given booster can launch it's maximum weight to a given altitude launching at 0 degrees inclination, that is due East. (In the same plane as the Equator.) At that angle the booster gets the maximum help from the Earth's spin. As the angle of inclination increases (or decreases) the help from the Earth's spin goes down, and so does the payload to a given altitude. Minimum payload to a given altitude occurs at +/- 180 degrees, or due West. (You have to 'slow down' relative to the Earth before 'speeding up' to orbital velocity.)
The ISS is in a 52 degree orbit so that the Russians can reach it from their launch sites. The orbits they can reach are limited because of where the stages of the booster will drop early in the flight. Low inclinations require either dropping the stages on China, or choosing trajectories that require so much booster energy that useful payload drops dramatically. Since the Russian modules had to be launched more-or-less fully equipped, ISS had to be in an orbit they could effectively reach, thus causing the US to accept a major payload hit.
After her latest overhaul Columbia can in fact reach the station with a minimal payload. (Which is even specified in the article [space.com] you referenced.) Check your facts.
Geosync is the most crowded orbital position we have. This is the last place you want to be if you are trying to avoid junk.
Geosync is crowded because for a given 'slot' (a chunk of orbit that can see directly a specific spot on the ground) there is a lot of competition. Also while there are a number of dead sattelites in the vicinity, there is almost no booster stages, debris from breakups, or 'lost' hardware. In fact geosync is highly desireable for debris avoidance because the relative velocities and absolute debris density are much lower. Check your facts.
Re:natural debris (Score:1)
The ISS is inside Earth's magnetosphere, so it's largely protected from the nasty particles the Sun, etc., heave at us.
MJC
Suggestion (Score:2, Funny)
Major Threat (Score:1, Redundant)
On a side note, now that the ISS is higher, how is it's visibility from earth affected (if any) and will it stay at its new altitude (if so, for how long)?
Just one more note, Heaven's Above [heavens-above.com] is a great resource for tracking satellites and other close to home astronomical events (such as Iridium flares [heavens-above.com]).
Re:where? (Score:1)
Why? (Score:5, Interesting)
Just curious.
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
:)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
In practice you can't predict the orbit exactly, so the rules say that if the vehicle is coming within a certain distance (a few miles), then measures have to be taken, ranging from moving the vehicle to piling into the escape vehicle, depending on the predicted distance.
Re: err on the side of caution + stupidity? (Score:1)
What happens... (Score:1)
It's been done before... (Score:2)
...what? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:...what? (Score:2)
adj.
1. Inclined or intended to evade: took evasive action.
...that doesn't say anythng about attacking... not even envading.
Re:...what? (Score:1)
you do...
There was an article on this in discover magazine (Score:3, Informative)
Not as big a risk (Score:1)
Laser guard for space station (Score:2, Interesting)
how much space junk could be removed by a nuke (Score:1)
Re:how much space junk could be removed by a nuke (Score:1)
The little EMP event you mention would be quite damaging. Take a look at every electronic device around your home. (Including your car). Now imagine it as a paperweight.
Time for Quark! (Score:1)
-Bill
Burn it. (Score:1)
Burn it. (Score:1)
Magnetic Satalite (Score:1)
Re:Magnetic Satalite (Score:1)
Useful Links: (Score:2)
The reason they are moving the shuttle (Score:1)
On any other given day when the shuttle leaves the station they fly a lap around the station (to check it out and take photos.)
I was watching this on Nasa TV and I heard that at first (because they where using fuel on the burn to move the station) the shuttle was only going to do a 1/4 lap around the station, But after the bean counters on the ground re-did the maths they mannage to pull out a half lap around the station (if the shuttle crew loose a hour of their off duty time and sleep with the shuttle pointed towards the stars..)
There is some US agency that monitors space junk I think their name is "space command" (I think the same mob who montors missile launches) they issue warnings when something comes within a 40 mile box of the station.
Seen Futurama? (Score:1)