ISS Dodges Space Junk For First Time In Five Years 141
Kligat writes "For the first time since 2003, the International Space Station has utilized the rockets on the European Space Agency's Automated Transfer Vehicle to dodge leftover remnants of a defunct satellite. The Russian Cosmos-2421 was launched in June 2006 to track Western Navy vessels and is believed by NASA to have exploded — 'likely due to a self-destruct command issued by Russian officials' according to the article — leaving 500 pieces of space debris. Ordinarily, the rockets on the ATV are used to take the ISS away from Earth's atmosphere and reduce drag. In this case, the 5-minute firing caused the ISS to move downward because it was already near the top of its acceptable range. Estimated probability of impact was 1 in 72, and an avoidance maneuver is called for if the probability is greater than 1 in 10,000. The space junk was predicted to pass the ISS within just a mile."
In SOVIET RUSSIA.. (Score:5, Funny)
You watch out for spy satellites!
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lol
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Actually, this really sucks because the rockets were used to LOWER the ISS. What a waste. I wonder how much warning they get before estimated impact.
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while it seems like a waste cause the rocket fuel was used to cancel out a previous boost maneuver, keep in mind that the ISS needs to be within a certain altitude band to be reachable by the soyuz/shuttle. also, the humans on board necessitate resupply missions more often than boost manuevers are required anyway.
Re:In SOVIET RUSSIA.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, this really sucks because the rockets were used to LOWER the ISS. What a waste. I wonder how much warning they get before estimated impact.
Actually, they were planning to lower the ISS for the next few missions anyway so that the shuttle would be able to bring up more cargo than usual. This maneuver wasn't so much a waste as it would seem to be.
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Actually, this really sucks because the rockets were used to LOWER the ISS. What a waste. I wonder how much warning they get before estimated impact.
It's not like ISS is trying to get to Mars. It's a space station, it just goes around in circles.
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Yup it's a space station, not some silly moon (even if it acts like it) ;)
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The ISS is slowed by atmospheric drag, so it must be reboosted every so often. This maneuver cancels out a reboost effort, so that reboost effort, and this manwuver, were just a waste of fuel.
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Just like a supermarket (Score:2, Funny)
Russia just can't tell the truth. (Score:2)
Pure case of state-controled media going on in Russia. They're not willing to admit they had a spy satellite in the first place, so they're not able to explain where the debris came from. That turns out to be something NASA is more than willing to do for the American side.
Re:Russia just can't tell the truth. (Score:5, Funny)
Re: "garbage" (Score:5, Funny)
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Then again, maybe I should lighten up and not care so much about this.
Re:Russia just can't tell the truth. (Score:5, Interesting)
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I just mentioned that to my Martian friend, and he said "Gzornak frokka wa Hubble, flrckin earthling!"
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I just mentioned that to my Martian friend, and he said "Gzornak frokka wa Hubble, flrckin earthling!"
Meh, give the Martian some water, and he'll grok that he is your bitch.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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You wish. There are over 140 US objects tracked by us amateur satellite trackers which are classified - i.e. they officially do not exist and the only public data on their orbits comes from us amateur trackers. Not NASA, the DoD or any other US government agency.
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So how do you know they are US objects?
A mile? (Score:4, Interesting)
Aren't orbital trajectories pretty well known? How is there a 1 in 72 chance that the thing will make a sudden mile-long jog and hit the station?
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Hmm, good question. I suppose only SchrÃdinger's Cat knows for sure. :-/
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Haven't you done enough to that poor cat.
Cats are people too.. only with paws and fur and they taste good in chinese food.
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Re:A mile? (Score:5, Insightful)
An HTML entity shouldn't be required. It's 2008; we should be able to stick Unicode into these boxes.
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So everyone else on this thread is offtopic, but GP is +5, Insightful?
Could someone of the crack-smoking moderators please explain me this logic?
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It frequently drives me crazy that I still can't just type in a euro symbol into slashdot submission boxes. The currency is a decade old next year, and will have been in people's pockets for 8 years!
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According to that list [nasa.gov], there are 12 objects with a probability >1/10,000, and 2 with a probability > 1/1000.
Note that the uncertainty on these orbits is frequently many 1000's of km; the orbits of things in LEO are much better determined.
Re:A mile? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because when dealing with the vastness of space a mile is pretty damn close.
Re:A mile? (Score:5, Informative)
The orbital trajectory of every piece of debris from a spy satellite that was intentionally blown up isn't so well known, especially when the nation controlling the satellite wants it to be a secret.
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Re:A mile? (Score:5, Insightful)
While that's a valid point for some situations, radar systems tend to have problems tracking objects below a certain size. A marble moving at 36,000 miles an hour isn't likely to be picked up by any radar array that I've ever seen.
The other problem is that they suck up a lot of juice. An active radar dish blaring away 24/7 would be a significant drain on the electrical power available to the ISS. I can't say it's not possible since I don't know how much their solar arrays can generate, but I'm willing to wager that it'd be a problem.
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Add to what you said that if the debris is traveling at a high speed WRT the ISS, even if it could be detected by radar there wouldn't be a whole lot of time to do anything about it.
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Leaving aside the resolution and power consumptions issues that other respondents discuss, look at the ranges involved. According to Wikipedia, the I
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The trouble with that is that say you need an hour to plan and exectute an avoidence manoeuvre (and I bet in practice it takes much longer).
Lets assume that the junk is in a similar orbit to the ISS but going in the opposite direction. That would place the junk over 30 thousand miles away at planning time. That is a long way away and going to be extremely difficult to detect. It may even be too far away to see at all due to the earth obscuring the view (remember the ISS is only a couple of hundred miles hig
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Re:A mile? (Score:5, Informative)
At the risk of being redundant, it's roughly a 1 in 72 chance that their calculations of a "miss" are off. Calculations of this sort involve a margin of error, from not precisely knowing locations of these objects to not being able to do forecasting accurately enough. Debris A gets hit by debris B (which somehow evaded your radar), sending off two new chunks of metal which weren't even IN your original calculations. I'm actually impressed that they can put solid numbers on these things, but I guess that's what supercomputers are for.
Yay for safety margins.
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The trajectories are actually chaotic, although roughly linear (well, elliptic) around the earth. As the bits also orbit around the moon, the ISS itself, and each other, there is no possible way to accurately predict their location in the future - the error margins will grow with time until a new and precise observation is made.
Q.V. The three-body problem [wikipedia.org], and, more generally, the n-body problem (same page).
Justin.
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orbital trajectories pretty well known, yes but hard to predict out to the future. So while you might know exactly where something is right now what you don't know is where exactly is will be next week. The unknowns are things like how much drag might slow it down, the atmosphere is not 100% constant and we don't know the shape of the object. Earth's gravity varies be location. We don't know about Solar activity and then there is the gravitational effects of the sun, moon and planets (Jupiter). With so
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Only to a certain degree of accuracy. There is no such thing as perfect accuracy to begin with, then there are a lot of unknown variables. While it's been up there orbiting, has it been hitting things that are too small for us to detect and pushing it off course? Has it changed it's orientation slightly and now has a minutely different amount of drag from air particles? Were our measurments off to begin with? We don't know, and these things can add up to huge amounts over time.
A 71 in 72 chance of being les
in soviet russia (Score:1)
it needs friggen lasers (Score:3, Interesting)
this post made me wonder. could they repurpose the nautilus anti missle laser system to knock the space junk that threatens the station out of the vacum of space. Or could it make things worse? (lots of tiny particles you can't avoid vs. a couple of big particles.
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Re: it needs friggen lasers (Score:5, Funny)
Or could it make things worse? (lots of tiny particles you can't avoid vs. a couple of big particles.
well, what we need then is a linux admin who has mastered that Asteroids game
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Bring in the Toy Box. :) (Score:2)
Planetes (Score:1, Informative)
Any fans of the anime Planetes [wikipedia.org] ?
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Recycle It! (Score:4, Funny)
They should attach large electromagnets to the ISS and collect all of the space junk it passes by for recycling. I wonder what payment the recycling depot would give for satellite parts.
I don't keep track of shuttle payloads, but I would imagine that there would be room for a satellite or two in the cargo bay on the return trip.
All kidding aside... (Score:2)
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Yeah! (Score:2)
Yeah, I imagine some of the top-secret nuclear waste some of them might be recovering is totally worth a lot of money!!!
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Name it the inconvenient Al Gore enviro-shuttle...
Is there a such thing as polluting the universe?
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There are two problems.
The first is relative speed, it is extremely difficult to collect something that is moving at thousands of miles per hour relative to you. Shuttle missions to visit/retrive something existing (e.g. the ISS or the hubble) have to be carefully planned so they match orbits.
The second is even if you found a way to retrive them they aren't going to be all that valuable. Afaict most of the cost of a sattalite is in the cost of the precision engineering and the cost of the launch not the cos
Within 1 mile? (Score:4, Informative)
That's a heck of a close call, considering the ISS is traveling at 4.8 miles per second. That's little like a car at highway speed running a red light and missing another car by less than one car length.
Re:Within 1 mile? (Score:4, Interesting)
Not really, since their relative speeds may be far less. If the debris cloud is traveling on the same trajectory at 4.7 miles per second, then their relative velocity is only 360 miles per hour.
On the other hand, if it's traveling on the exact opposite trajectory at the same speed .... ouch.
Yeah, yeah (Score:1)
And my hypothetical intersection doesn't have to be at right angles either.
ISS altitude graph (Score:5, Informative)
Impact probability ? (Score:2)
Anyone here know how they calculate "impact probability" ? I mean, my poor man's logic seems to think you either hit something, or you don't. Bool 1, or Bool 0.
If you miss something by a mile, how does that wind up being a 1 in 72 probability ? No offense to the space buffs, of which I am not one, but that sounds like game show odds to me: "You're bound to lose, but let's all act excited anyway!"
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The calculated miss distance was about a mile, but there was uncertainty in that miss distance such that there was a 1 in 72 chance it wouldn't miss the ISS, but instead hit it directly.
To answer your question (at a high level), the sensors and models that are used to track and predict the debris locations have associated mathematical models that can put a number on the uncertainty of where that debris is. The uncertainty takes into account things like how many radar obs were made, the inherent accuracy of
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Thank you for that excellent reply. Makes perfect sense!
Hitting Space Junk (Score:5, Funny)
> ISS Dodges Space Junk For First Time In Five Years
It must be really banged up after 5 years of hitting space junk.
Admit it! You thought it too!
Re:Can't we just span a huge net (Score:4, Funny)
in space so we could catch all the space junk? We just need to be careful that we don't catch any space stations by accident...
Considering who would be putting the net out there, what do you think the chances of accidently catching a space station (or satellite) are, hmm?
Re:Can't we just span a huge net (Score:4, Insightful)
Would have to be a pretty tight net... small particles moving fast enough can rip a dangerous hole in spacecraft.
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Which is why you'd magnetize it. Most of the debris up there is at least partially metallic.
Heck, just toss a flat sheet of metal with a couple retro-rockets up there, let it fly around for an orbit or two collecting debris, then bring it down. Repeat a couple of times and there goes a lot of the small debris.
The problem isn't coming up with ways to get rid of space junk, it's coming up with cheap and efficient ways and getting them implemented.
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How about a laser beam? (Score:2)
One of those lasers they claim can destroy missiles should easily be able to zap a bit of space junk.
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One of those lasers they claim can destroy missiles should easily be able to zap a bit of space junk.
Ah, but there's a trick to that, you know?
See, the amount of destructive potential needed to damage a missile sufficiently to prevent it from successfully continuing in its firing arc, reaching its target, and exploding is much less than it would take to vaporize a solid object in space or even just break it up and send it into the atmosphere...
Let's suppose this is a laser-based system - it might be able to disable a missile by hitting it with a beam, heating up the material along the beam enough to cut th
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Not all the junk is orbiting at the same inclination you know...
Re:Can't we just span a huge net (Score:4, Funny)
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SUCK.. SUCK.. SUCK..!
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in space so we could catch all the space junk? We just need to be careful that we don't catch any space stations by accident...
Think how fast that junk is traveling.
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So move the net at that speed - 2 km/h, big deal? ;D
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It's time for Roger Wilco?
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...and the thousands of satellites in orbit.
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We can worry about that when it's too late.
Eddy current Deflection Loop (Score:1)
Planetes (Score:2)
There is an anime/manga called Planetes [wikipedia.org] that is entirely about a group who collect dangerous space debris to make Earth orbit safe for commerce. It's actually has an authentic ring to it in terms of the problems, technology and techniques.
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You're talking about (to a small angle approximation for the popular geosynchronous orbit) pushing a broom across 8.625 billion square miles. Take into account three dimensions in order to sweep a range of orbits and uncertainty and non-circular orbits....
You would never be able to remove as much debris as you added through malfunctions, fuel discharge, maneuvering jets, et cetera.
Re:Space help? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm not a rocket scientist. Is there another kind of drag that needs to be reduced?
The drag of being stuck in a space station! It's pretty much like being in prison, but when you stick some rockets on it, suddenly you feel like a supervillain!
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Doesn't help if you're also forced to watch bad movies.
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Is there another kind of drag that needs to be reduced?
Yes, they had too many transvestites on board.
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Re:slownewsday? (Score:5, Informative)
Depends on the error ellipse of the orbit determination for the junk, and it sounds like the uncertainty is a good fraction of a mile in size. But in any case, the miss distance is a mile after the course adjustment, not before.
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Film will be interrupted for a recap of the story at 7
Re:Pretty New Space Junk (Score:4, Informative)
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Zarya was funded and is owned by the US [wikipedia.org], though we paid Russia quite a lot to build it. Even thought Zvezda was really built mainly by the Soviets in the 1980s for their old programme, it was delayed quite a lot (delaying the entire ISS deployment), launched without backup or insurance (causing extra NASA expenses and still more delays), and has broken down a lot (more delays). Russia basically cut back funding its ISS commitments (though the $1M Pizza Hut logo on Zvezda helped out). Meanwhile Russia has fu
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Also remarkable: a business model that goes like this:
You'll notice the "???" and "Profit!" steps are all thoroughly pre-mixed in with all the other steps, for your Slashdotting convenience.
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It's a space worker's paradise over there.
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> And that's why, ladies and gentlemen, the US plans to rely on Russian launches for our entire ISS mission programme.
Don't panic: those very clever Europeans can save the day (again): you can have a ride in the ATV [wikipedia.org] :-)
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Don't panic: those very clever Europeans can save the day (again): you can have a ride in the ATV [wikipedia.org] :-)
Which isn't currently capable of transporting humans to orbit, and whilst ESA have made comments about doing so they don't seem to have much intention of it.