Boeing Proposes Using Gas Clouds To Bring Down Orbital Debris 147
cylonlover writes "Boeing has filed a patent application for a method of disposing of dead satellites and other debris orbiting the earth by hitting them with a puff of gas. The method, which is still at the conceptual stage, is designed to slow down satellites, forcing them to re-enter the atmosphere without sending up more space junk that itself will need disposing of. The idea is to send a small satellite into orbit containing a gas generator. This generator can be a tank of cryogenic gas, such as xenon or krypton, or a device designed to vaporize a heavy metal or some relatively heavy elements like fluorine, chlorine, bromine, or iodine. This gas would be released as a cloud in the same orbit as the debris, but traveling in the opposite direction."
Clever of them to patent this, since knock-off space-junk removal systems are in such high demand.
Let's just call it what it is... (Score:5, Funny)
A space fart!
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I've brought down a few of my coworkers the same way.
This is not a bad patent (Score:5, Insightful)
It's an apparently wholly new and unique method for doing something in the physical world. Why would it make them evil to patent that?
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Because if you patent stuff that makes sure that it is not used. Consider the car and oil industries. They are reputed to have patented all sorts of things to stop them. This is why we have not had any alternatives to fuel guzzling junkhepas until very recently.
Everything else had been patented.
If you want something to catch on, think "IBM Compatible" or WWW. Neither of those 2 ideas were patented and they seem to have been pretty widely adopten and further developed.
Re:This is not a bad patent (Score:5, Informative)
Because if you patent stuff that makes sure that it is not used.
Boeing is not a patent troll. They actually make stuff. The obvious customer for this is NASA and other space agencies, and Boeing is a contractor. If they have the patent, they are the obvious choice as the contractor.
Consider the car and oil industries. They are reputed to have patented all sorts of things to stop them.
Please don't use weasel words to make insinuations that you can't back up with evidence. Patents are public records. Can you point to a single case of this actually happening?
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Because if you patent stuff that makes sure that it is not used.
Boeing is not a patent troll. They actually make stuff. The obvious customer for this is NASA and other space agencies, and Boeing is a contractor. If they have the patent, they are the obvious choice as the contractor.
It also has the advantage of preventing an actual patent troll from getting a patent on it first, and if Boeing spends tons of money on R&D to get the details right, then nobody can copy their solution and underbid them, so it protects Boeing's investment. This is exactly what patents are meant for. It seems everyone is so allergic to the idea of patents after all the patent troll stories we read, people forget that patents actually do have a purpose other than to make lawyers lots of money.
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I dunno. Ethernet is patented. As is Wi-Fi. And they seem to have caught on. Cellphones are horrendously heavily patented since their inception, and they seem pretty popular. Heck, MP3s are patented to the hilt and back, too.
Many of the early PCs like the Apple II were completely open - they did have schematics and source code listing
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Because if you patent stuff that makes sure that it is not used. Consider the car and oil industries. They are reputed to have patented all sorts of things to stop them. This is why we have not had any alternatives to fuel guzzling junkhepas until very recently..
First, I'd like to see a citation for your "reputed" claim.
Second, the reason why we have not had alternatives for gas guzzlers is not for lack of trying. It's because the alternatives are not competitive from a technical or economic standpoint, neither of which are a direct result of being held back by hostile patent holders.
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Consider the car and oil industries. They are reputed to have patented all sorts of things to stop them.This is why we have not had any alternatives to fuel guzzling junkhepas (sic) until very recently.
Do you really believe this? If some kind of magical additive or technology existed that would allow practical cars to get 100 mpg do you really think the Chinese or Soviet Russians, who have shown our IP claims mean nothing to them, would choose to not utilize it and tell the patent holder "fine, take us to court.?"
I do not think it is logically consistent to honestly believe that TPTB can successfully suppress markedly superior technology to maintain the status quo to the level of no other country adopti
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The evil would lie in how it's enforced.
Unless they've already implemented it, it's possible that their solution doesn't work as specified in the patent. Then if somebody else comes along with a similar idea but different implementation (for example, maybe a different temperature or density of the gas) that actually works, Boeing can sue them.
The patent system has degenerated into protecting the results rather than the specific implementations, so somebody can put some words on paper for something that doe
Yes it is (Score:2)
Because It's not really [wsj.com]all that unique [arxiv.org]
Why are the links so recent? Because after that collision 2 years ago they put out a request for people to think about this problem.
Re:This is not a bad patent (Score:4, Informative)
Because it didn't require research or investment to come up with it, and hence doesn't warrant a temporary monopoly enforced by the government.
Using diffuse gases to slow orbiting vehicles is common, it's called aerobraking. Doing it with artificially created puffs of gas isn't exactly a new or unique idea either. I guarantee you Boeing didn't wasn't the first to come up with it, they were just the first to patent it. They can get away with that, because there's no prior art -- not because it had been impossible for others to come up with it before -- but simply because there has been no need for it. No market = no prior art. Now that the problem is starting to get worse, there's going to be a market soon. Boeing is just being anti-competitive by rushing to patent obvious stuff that just didn't need to be used before.
Patents are (theoretically) for protecting the fruits of expensive novel research, not for trivial, handwavy ideas that suddenly have a market. This is why we're all so pissed off with all the patents along the lines of "existing idea but now with computers", which are far too common. Those ideas would have been impossible decades ago not for a lack of research, but a lack of a market. Before ubiquitous computers, there was no profitable way to "add computers" to an existing method or process. It's not research that enabled these new patents, but changing market realities.
Lets say Boeing starts actually developing these gas-based systems, but finds that the gas tank nozzle is clogged because of the cryogenic temperatures causing trace gases like CO2 freezing inside the valve and blocking it. Compared to cold-gas reaction control systems, their satellite may need a very slow gas release rate, and hence a narrow nozzle, so this could actually be a big problem. They may want a passive system to avoid the need for complex, heavy, and failure-prone active heating systems. Lets say one of their engineers develops a special curved shape for the nozzle that accelerates the expanding gases in such a way as to prevent frozen particles from adhering to the walls. This might require complex mathematics, extensive numerical simulations, and lots of engineering tests in vacuum chambers with expensive gases. The result would be trivial to copy, but had needed expensive research into a wholly new concept. That is something that is worthy of patent protection.
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Using diffuse gases to slow orbiting vehicles is common, it's called aerobraking.
I gather Boeing isn't patenting aerobraking, but instead a novel way to deliver those gases. They also apparently have done research on designs for delivering such gases and for the effects of delivery.
Lets say Boeing starts actually developing these gas-based systems, but finds that the gas tank nozzle is clogged because of the cryogenic temperatures causing trace gases like CO2 freezing inside the valve and blocking it.
Let's not, since that is an easy problem to overcome, by removing the trace gases in exactly the way they're alleged to cause problems (that is, by freezing them out). A serious application would no doubt have further opportunity for patents.
unintended consequences? (Score:3)
What about the increased amounts of persistent drag that these clouds will present to later satelite deployments? Spraying the gas does not mean it magically disappears after it has done its job. While inside the roche limit, the gas clouds will eventually (after thousands of years) fall back into the atmosphere, the cloud doesn't magically vanish after being sprayed, and widespread use of the technology would make it radically difficult to orbit new satelites.
If used outside the roche limit, the clouds become persistent!
I don't think there is much debris needing deorbited outside the roche, but with politicians and corporations at the helm, you can't be too careful.
Re:unintended consequences? (Score:5, Informative)
If the gas is sprayed at less-than-orbital velocities, it'd just fall to Earth almost immediately. Boeing in fact addresses that:
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the cloud is created at a density and temperature to dissipate after creation and fall into the atmosphere.
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"Almost immediately" in what respect? That the orbit of the cloud is very unstable, and begins spiraling in immediately, or that it is fired directly at the earth?
See, as deorbiting objects descend the gravity well, they speed up and compress. Especially gasses.
Widespread deployment of such a tech would result in the formation of a thin planetary ring of vapor. Rotational effects would channel the gasses into the ecliptic plane of earth's rotation, where slow deorbiting would compress the gasses as they spi
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Re:unintended consequences? (Score:4, Insightful)
According to the patent application, "within second" for extremely LEO (100 km) and "tens of second" for slightly higher orbits (~400km). It'll depend on the exact application, but the proposal makes it sound like they intend the gas to be "stationary" relative to the Earth, so it'll be in free fall, basically. Other situations they propose put it at ~1km/s, where it will de-orbit rather quickly.
It is very very unlikely to cause issues. After all, we already spray gases around in orbit, it's the single method we have of propulsion, and I've never actually seen a single person worry that it will create long-term problems (although maybe it could, I very much doubt it).
Besides, it's a lot easier to deal with transient gas clouds slowing orbits than it is with ramming into shards of metal at 10km/s or more. Shards of metal with explosives in it, in (rare) cases of unburnt propellant.
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At orbital height the mean free path of gas atoms and molecules is large, the gas released will expand at very high speed and unless released with great precision right in the path milliseconds before impact it will have dissipated and be useless. The precision needed for this is comparable to destroying missiles by collision.
A better way would be to counter orbit a device that would eject a block of something bulky with a high vapor pressure, say an ice cube that you could steer with enough precision to i
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this may be considered a "non-problem" since the gas cloud might add 00.003% to the drag in orbit but it would be a lot easier on the stuff we WANT in orbit as apposed to several kilos/tons of random Hard Objects. (hmm bonus idea use a gas that will explode or otherwise create a "shockwave")
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You are assuming that the drag would be constant, which would make it easy to correct for.
A gas disc on the ecliptic would be like firing a bullet through may layers of seperated tissue paper. The tissue represents almost no resistance to the bullet, but after repeated penetrations, the effect is cumulative.
This is because few satelites live in the ecliptic plane of earth's rotation. Only geosyncronous satelites do that. Most satelites are not geosyncronous, and would regularly cross the gas disc. This mean
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I had the same thought, but would it get ionized and then directed to the poles where it becomes part of the northern lights? Someone should patent that variation of the concept quick!
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Satellites have their own thrusters for orbital correction maneouvers. They would have to bring more fuel with them, but it's still better than getting hit by space junk.
Traveler players unite (Score:2)
...sandcasters!
Clever of them to patent this? (Score:2)
Not really. Although there is 'high demand' for technology to solve this problem, the only customer is the government. And the government has unrestricted use of any patent it wants. Including subcontracting the equipment and execution of the task to any subcontractor it desires.
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Really? [wikipedia.org]
Wouldn't a nitrogen balloon cluster... (Score:2)
be safer, cheaper and just as effective? Assuming each balloon decayed (i.e. oriented itself with orifice pointing directly away from Earth and releasing a puff) within a set period so as not to continue to interfere with other traffic.
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You might be right about the positioning, but you wouldn't need too many of them if you know where the satellite was going to be. The reason I suggested this is that nitrogen is a lot cheaper and more abundant, so you might actually make the balloon bigger. Easier targeting and all that.
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If they can patent the "Jaws of Life" then why not the "Balloon of Death!?" Great fun at parties too.
Sounds like one man's debris... (Score:2)
...might be another man's satellite.
My bet is that the first implementation of this is an anti-satellite weapon.
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probably not since the response would be swift shotgun pellet sized
Re:Sounds like one man's debris... (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, probably not. That's the beauty of this. Shooting gas at a satellite might cause some orbit degradation, but it'd be tough to do something really nasty to it. This only works against small pieces of debris, much smaller than any satellite. Which has, incidentally, always been the most worrying aspect of orbital debris.
Why use this for ASAT? Better tools for it... (Score:2)
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Plausible deniability. This sounds like something you can deploy without much trace at all.
Heck, you could even just assert you had a "coolant leak" on your satellite :)
This is what patents are for... (Score:5, Insightful)
Please do correct me if I am wrong, but this reads like a patent application that contains a novel, concrete implementation of an idea that isn't necessarily obvious to one skilled in the art. That is what patents are supposed to protect, and I have to say I have no problem with that.
It's perhaps the first /. post in a long time that contains a patent that respects both the spirit and the letter of what a patent is supposed to be. It also sounds fairly ingenious and very interesting considering the possibilities, so props to Boeing.
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Yeah, but that just means that it has to be non-obvious to a much, much smarter group of people.
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Non-obvious? You're kidding, right? I have a can of Blow-It-Out® right here on my test bench. Gets the cruft out of those pesky keyboards.
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Don't let Cory Doctorow see this.
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Sweet!
and your chosen subject is the bloody obvious... (Score:2)
This is such an obvious idea that it isn't right that it should be patentable. There are only a few ways of slowing an orbiting object down so that it de-orbits. The way nature does it is by putting gas in the way, called the atmosphere.
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Stop bringing common-sense into this, dammit!
wait! (Score:2)
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You're ignoring where it says 'The method of claim 1, wherein' in each of those sentences.
None of those claims are general patents on physical laws. They are all specific to a sate
Re:Enough with the over-broad claims guys (Score:4, Insightful)
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Useful? (Score:2)
Given the cost of getting material up in space to start with, I'd rather see this 'space junk' mined / recycled / reused to build something else up in space, on the moon or somewhere else rather than bring it back down.
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Would probably cost more in money and energy to build, launch, and operate a vehicle to find, collect, and recycle all this debris than it would be worth. I believe we're talking about stuff the size of nuts and bolts moving at kilometers per _second_ in a sparse cloud surrounding the planet.
Prior Art (Score:2)
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Agree. It sounds awfully familiar - not sure if it's from SF or "real" science.
There's probably some very careful wording in there that makes it "novel" somehow.
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"Clever of them to patent this..." (Score:2)
Yes, it is. It means that if the US government decides to do this it or whoever wins the contract to do it for them will have to purchase a license from Boeing.
Shortsightedness abounds (Score:2)
"Clever of them to patent this, since knock-off space-junk removal systems are in such high demand"
If one does not think that the orbit around earth is going to be increasingly cluttered on is just not looking very far.
It is sad on a supposed tech and science site for someone to suggest that the clutter will not become a problem.
The refrain seems to be why patent anything that doesn't have immediate use.
What a crock of shit.
Possible prior art (Score:2)
It is cool. Might turn a satellite into a cloud of debris, not a slower solid satellite.
But is it obvious, if you know astronomy, read manga, or just live in space for a while and try to stop debris with what you have on hand?
A "micro dust cloud" sounds similar to Boeing's cloud of heavy gas (a "nano d
Wait (Score:2)
Xenon and krypton are rare and expensive, especially xenon, which is used in spacecraft ion engines. Using it for this purpose is a serious waste.
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The cloud wouldn't last very long, but long enough to hit the debris. By the time it hit, the gas would have expanded until it was almost a vacuum, so it wouldn't damage the debris. In fact, an astronaut caught in such a cloud probably wouldn't even notice it.
Re:What about the non-junk? (Score:5, Interesting)
This reminds me of another method using light instead of gas, which was described at a recent space conference. The idea was to pulse laser light toward the west (since most space debris is traveling predominantly eastward), and over time the photons alone could provide enough delta-v to nudge things out of orbit more quickly. For the big stuff they have other plans in mind, such as electrostatic tethers and micro-rockets. But for little stuff, the light pulse would be a cost-effective "shotgun" approach to deal with the cloud of crap that's too small to track.
Sorry I can't find a link at the moment. I saw it a few months ago on YouTube from either NewSpace or SpaceUp, or ISDC or one of the other conferences in the last year or two.
Re:What about the non-junk? (Score:4, Informative)
Here's a quick summary of the procedure you're talking about: http://www.technologyreview.com/view/423302/nasa-studies-laser-for-removing-space-junk/ [technologyreview.com]
Initially, they were thinking of ablating the surface of the junk with the laser, but turns out you need a hell of a lot of power to do that, so it wouldn't be very economical. More recent calculations suggest exposure to a ~5kW laser might be enough to decay the orbit enough to bring it back into the atmosphere where it'll burn up, and they estimate that a device such as this, big enough to handle 5-10 objects a day, could be put together for a few million dollars.
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How long is "not very long"? Xenon atoms from a boiling liquid at only move at about 5 m/s. That's not enough of a disturbance relative to the orbital velocity (measured in kilometers per second) to make them fall out of orbit. (The starting orbit is stable, or the space-junk would not need removing.)
The gas atoms would have to collide with something before they'd fall down. And space being near-vacuum, it could take some time before that happens. So there will be an expanding cloud of gas that stays in orb
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How do they propose to keep the non-junk from being de-orbited by the same gas? (I'm too lazy to read TFA.)
Physics.
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Actually, for those sats that share orbits, this would be a problem, which is why they use a gas that would disperse in short order.
Presumably any sats that were not targets, but still close enough to the gas cloud, would eventually need a slight nudge to correct their orbit, but then that kind of orbit correction happens occasionally anyway. (One definition of a dead satellite is one that has no maneuvering fuel left to do station keeping [wikipedia.org].). So if your satellite is still operational it probably would not
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You've just described the flaw in the plan: who would buy such a thing? Boeing isn't going to build them out of the goodness of their heart. The people who put satellites up would benefit from clearing out the orbit they want to use, but that is nowhere near as simple as putting one of these sweepers into that orbit, only retrograde, because of all the different orbits of the debris that intersects it. It would be ridiculously expensive to try to clear one orbit for one satellite.
What we have here is an exa
Re:What about the non-junk? (Score:4, Interesting)
Clearly the customers here are Governments.
One of the first orbits to be cleared would probably be around the ISS.
John Campbell of Iridium spoke at a June 2007 forum discussing the difficulty of handling all the notifications they were getting regarding close approaches, which numbered 400 per week (for approaches within 5 km) for the entire Iridium constellation. He estimated the risk of collision per conjunction as one in 50 million. Yet in 2009, less than two years after he made his prediction, his company lost Iridium 33 to a collision.
To date, there have been eight known high-speed collisions in all, most of which were only noticed well after the fact.
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Perhaps an international consortium of space-faring nations could claim it all and put orbits up for auction, then use the proceeds to clean it up?
They can start by selling .com, .org, .edu, .org and .net orbits.
Charge just enough to keep the orbits clean. What could go wrong?
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No, this is not a tragedy of the commons, this is yet another example of externalising expenses [wikipedia.org] - same as dumping toxic shit into a river or burning coal to generate electricity.
Unless there's a bill to pay or laws to prohibit it, you can get away with pretending that the expense of managing and disposing of your waste doesn't exist (and, magically, for YOU it doesn't exist).
You get the benefit of your waste-producing activity, but everyone else has to pay for it.
The "Tragedy of the Commons" is a popular me
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Clearly, we would need to send an even bigger satellite to take care of the old one. And then a bigger one, and then a bigger one, until one day we make a board with a nail in it so big, it destroys the whole world!!
*Maniacal laughter*
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Who said anything about BIG.
The beauty of this approach is that the gas delivery vehicle need not be all that big to hurry the orbital decay of lots of dead sats and space junk.
Think of it as a tire spike strip for space.
Re:And what do you do with... (Score:4, Informative)
Boeing [uspto.gov]:
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Actually, the patent does not mention anything about the size of the delivery vehicle.
1000 kg is well within the lift capabilities of even the smallest launch vehicles still in operation [wikipedia.org]. Only marginally bigger than Opportunity Rover, which was delivered to mars by an Atlas V 451, which can easily put 10,000kg in LEO.
That is not big by standard of satellites in orbit.
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As long as it is still under control when it is at end of life you just have it shoot the last bit of gas out the side opposite the earth to de-orbit it.
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So you are telling me if the orbit was changed to being much lower and closer to the atmosphere that it would not end up slowing down and re-entering?
Aren't there stationary orbits? Couldn't you end up entering one by slowing down?
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Frankly I never understood this very well either, untill I started playing the game "Kerbal Space Program". Suddenly, I understand why firing the gas into the direction you're traveling makes way more sense, than firing it into space to move you 'closer' to the earth. You're already actively falling inward to ear
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So you are telling me if the orbit was changed to being much lower and closer to the atmosphere that it would not end up slowing down and re-entering?
Possibly, yes. Depending on where it is and how fast it's going, simply vectoring it "downward" might only push it into a more-elliptical, but still stable, orbit. Slowing itself down (i.e. doing to itself what it's just been doing to loads of space junk) would be more surefire.
Geostationary orbits are extremely tricky mathematically - it's not just about your velocity, it's about your orbital radius, too. There's literally only one altitude/velocity combination where Earth's gravity can keep you in a st
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1 have it shoot the payload so that the sat gets deorbited
2 make the sat just bulky enough to do the job (like one of those drink pouches only with more gizmos)
3 set things up so that your target junk hits the sat on the way down
4 put a sign on the side "free junk and wait for a "purple neck" alien to grab it
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Not only that, but you are sending up a unit to bring down a piece of space debris.
So are you launching an object on top of a rocket into space. Then you have to blow the aerodynamic covers off while in orbit.
At that point the craft can latch on to one of the 2 covers now in orbit and bring it back down.
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That's the equivalent of having one trash truck for every house and then just driving it into the landfill instead of dumping it. Good plan.
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Slowing debris down in the manner you have described is going to be very fuel intensive if you expect this disposable satellite to speed up to catch another piece of debris and slow down, rinse and repeat. I assume you aren't proposing disposable satellites for each piece of space debris.
That's what I was thinking.
Just releasing the gas in the path of the target satellite would slow down or speed up your vehicle enough to require course corrections. If you were to have enough gas on board to do two simultaneous releases on opposite sides of the vehicle you might be able to mitigate this.
But simply getting to the proper place for EACH of the thousands of sats and space junk targets would take a lot of maneuvering.
This seems overly complex and subtle. Its main advantage seems to be that it
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Cool story, bro.
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Simple, you describe how your concept will work.
Proceed beyond the conceptual stage and determine if your concept holds up. If it does, congrats, your patent is valid.
If it doesn't work, you better hurry up and get a NEW patent because your old patent won't cover your now changed method/invention.