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ISS Shark Space Technology

ISS Could Be Fitted With Lasers To Shoot Down Space Junk 167

An anonymous reader writes Japan's Riken research institute has suggested a new idea for dealing with space junk. They say a fiber optic laser mounted onto the International Space Station could blast debris out of the sky. From the article: "To combat the increasingly dense layer of dead satellites and miscellaneous space debris that are enshrouding our planet, no idea — nets, lassos, even ballistic gas clouds — seems too far-fetched to avoid. Now, an international team of researchers led by Japan's Riken research institute has put forward what may be the most ambitious plan to date. They propose blasting an estimated 3,000 tons of space junk out of orbit with a fiber optic laser mounted on the International Space Station."
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ISS Could Be Fitted With Lasers To Shoot Down Space Junk

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  • Still There? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Wild_dog! ( 98536 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @08:43AM (#49510059)

    Does poking holes space junk make it disappear or make more of it?

    • Not sure I understand it well, but the use of laser would create heat which would affect the orbit and therefore causing the junk to burn on reentry? That s my guess. Exciting stuff if you ask me!
      • by Anonymous Coward

        You find the militarization of space to be "exciting stuff"?
        This is the first step: a useful purpose.
        The next step is a killing machine.
        Haven't you been alive long enough to realize that ANY scientific "thing" will be used to destroy, maim and enslave?

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by rubycodez ( 864176 )

          space has always been militarized, get over it

        • Haven't you been alive long enough to realize that ANY "thing" will be used to destroy, maim and enslave?

          Corrected that for you.

        • Well, have not gotten into the details, but surely a laser for changing the orbit of space junk would not be the kind of laser that you could use to say, fry a plane or a boat or a city. I think that the atmosphere would interfere and make that a very difficult endeavor. Also, being hosted at the ISS would mean there would be international supervision on it. So yes, I think it is exciting that we might be coming closer to the implementation of actual solutions to reduce space junk. And it's done with lase
        • Yeah, these sharpened sticks sure make hunting easier, but how long until people start pointing them at each other and suddenly we've got killing machines destroying, maiming and enslaving each other?
        • by smithmc ( 451373 ) *

          Haven't you been alive long enough to realize that ANY scientific "thing" will be used to destroy, maim and enslave?

          Haven't you? So what are you suggesting, a halt to all science?

      • How does heat affect the orbit?
        if you break space junk up it continues on the same orbit.

        And radiative momentum transfer can't exceed the momentum of the photons hitting it which won't be a lot or you'd also be pushing on the space station too.

        • by itzly ( 3699663 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @09:14AM (#49510359)

          How does heat affect the orbit?

          You vaporize one side of the object, and the expanding gases provide some thrust.

          • by eth1 ( 94901 )

            How does heat affect the orbit?

            You vaporize one side of the object, and the expanding gases provide some thrust.

            I'm not sure you'd even need to vaporize anything. Ever seen one of these [stockarch.com]?

            • How does heat affect the orbit?

              You vaporize one side of the object, and the expanding gases provide some thrust.

              I'm not sure you'd even need to vaporize anything. Ever seen one of these [stockarch.com]?

              I assume you're implying radiation pressure could push things out of orbit. Perhaps, but that device doesn't demonstrate radiation pressure.

              The Crookes Radiometer [wikipedia.org] depends on air molecules being present to work. It spins with the dark side of the veins trailing, in the opposite direction you would expect from light pressure (for which the light side has a greater impulse due to recoil of the photons instead of absorption.)

              In theory, radiation pressure [wikipedia.org] could indeed push objects out of orbit, but I'm too busy/

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward

          if you break space junk up it continues on the same orbit.

          The force of gravity is proportional to mass, so the acceleration doesn't change if you break an object into parts. However, other effects are not proportional to mass, in particular atmospheric drag and radiative pressure. In low Earth orbit, there is still enough gas around to drag small bodies and dust down over the timescale of months or years.

          And radiative momentum transfer can't exceed the momentum of the photons hitting it which won't be a lot or you'd also be pushing on the space station too.

          Radiative pressure is all about the ratio of surface area to total mass. Large objects like the space station are pushed on by radiative pressure, but they hav

        • If you blow it into tiny pieces, you up the cross-section-to-mass ratio. The ISS orbits low - there's still a slight atmospheric drag. Things will come down, and small things faster.

      • We see this on earth all the time. Heat a pan of water, and it jumps off of the kitchen range.

        Changing the temperature of an item doesn't change it's trajectory, or orbit. Thermal energy doesn't magically change itself into kinetic energy. All that is going to happen is, the cold bits of scrap will turn into warm bits of scrap.

    • Re:Still There? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @08:48AM (#49510099)

      Does poking holes space junk make it disappear or make more of it?

      Ablative Laser Propulsion [wikipedia.org].

    • by Holi ( 250190 )
      More likely using the laser to push the objects into a decaying orbit. I am sure the article goes into detail, I'm just to lazy to read it.
    • Two points for having more of a clue than the author. Yes, the laser will poke holes through most of the space junk. A laser isn't going to blast anything out of the sky. That crap is floating in vacuum. Laser hits, it burns through, a little bit of the skin is vaporized into the vacuum, and you're left with just as much debris up there as you started with. Some of it has been heated, liquified, and "evaporated" into space is all.

      • I guess some folks are suggesting you can heat up on side and guide it into the atmosphere so it will burn up on re-entry. I didn't know that this is what they are talking about. Wink Wink Nudge Nudge... say no more.

    • by sootman ( 158191 )

      If you shoot a piece of space junk, it splits into two. You shoot each of those, you get two more. You shoot those, they disappear. Documentary on the process here. [wikipedia.org]

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Vaporizing the surface of the junk generates thrust.

  • I'd sooner put a giant laser on the moon.
    • Maybe they thought the closer the better?
    • That's no moon.....
    • by necro81 ( 917438 )
      That was my reaction, too: what advantage does putting it on the ISS get you, balanced against any added costs / difficulties / constraints, compared to a standalone satellite? On the plus side, you have an abundance of solar power available, along with cooling loops, attitude control, etc. What is more, you may be able to make use of astronauts to provide debug and repair capabilities. On the other hand, you are limited to the ISS' orbital inclination and altitude, and probably a variety of added design
      • by jbengt ( 874751 )
        Putting it on the ISS also gets you the advantage of being able to more easily target junk on orbits that may intersect with the orbit of the ISS.
    • For the love of sanity why? The moon is 770 times as far away, which means you'd need a laser almost 600,000 times more powerful than one in Low Earth Orbit to deliver the same "punch". (Lasers spread out like any other beam of light, so inverse square law applies). Your aiming mechanism also needs to be magnitudes more accurate. If you're running this off solar power, then the moon based laser is going to be out of commission half the time, and is not going to be at peak energy most of the time. Furth
  • by Geoffrey.landis ( 926948 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @08:44AM (#49510071) Homepage

    The idea of using lasers to de-orbit space debris has been around for a while.
    http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/... [harvard.edu]
    Back when I was working on lasers for power beaming, the idea was discussed as an alternate use for the ground-based lasers.

  • Have been covered pretty well in Sci-fi by Planetes, a manga / anime. I would very highly recommend checking it out. It does help to emphasize the problems that space debris can easily cause, especially when space travel becomes more common.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P... [wikipedia.org]

    • Re:This topic... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @09:10AM (#49510327)

      Planetes was a cool anime until near the end when the characters all when off the damn rails.

      Anyhow, the headline and description are terrible. The plan is not "blasting" debris out of space. They're using the lasers to degrade the orbit. The atmosphere would then destroy the debris. Of course, using lasers to "burn", "propel", or "push" the debris out of orbit doesn't sound nearly as sexy as "blasting" it. So, for everyone talking about how "blasting" will simply create more debris, it's not an issue.

  • Here is the problem. Blowing up or melting items does not work. Just leaves smaller material in orbit. Solution would likely be either breaking up space junk and then bringing it down or ejecting it out. Both are fraught with problems, mainly with timing and making sure we don't make the problem worse. Of course, if you want to clear out the orbit really quick, just grind up an asteroid and toss the resulting pebbles and sand into a retrograde, slowly diminishing orbit. What satellites?

    • Re:Doesn't work (Score:5, Informative)

      by MightyYar ( 622222 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @08:56AM (#49510163)

      Here is the problem. Blowing up or melting items does not work.

      But if you heat up one side of an object, that side out-gasses or vaporizes and alters the orbit. Pick the side intelligently and you can slowly nudge stuff into a decaying orbit.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Here is the problem. Blowing up or melting items does not work.

        But if you heat up one side of an object, that side out-gasses or vaporizes and alters the orbit. Pick the side intelligently and you can slowly nudge stuff into a decaying orbit.

        Because nothing spins in space.

        • The side currently facing the laser is still going to out-gas slightly more than the side that just turned away from the laser. Net effect might be less for a spinning object, but it will still be an effect. Besides, no one says this has to work for every single piece of space debris. So what if it "only" reduced the problem by 10%?

      • If the object is overtaking the ISS it can just heat the facing side up on approach, if the ISS is overtaking the object the ISS can heat up the facing side after passing it. Either should work to reduce orbital velocity, hopefully enough to drop it into the atmosphere. If my weak grasp on orbital mechanics is correct enough...
        • Since we are orbiting a sphere and not a circle, the calculations will be a tad more complex - but yes, that is the right idea.

      • I get that you saw an article about adjusting an asteroid's path and you're excited to share that, but you need to consider a few things:

        1) That method requires a wealth of energy/time and makes very miniscule adjustments that are applicable to asteroids because their orbit is so huge that small changes a long ways out can make a significant difference. This debris is literally right next to our planet.
        2) For the amount of time, energy, and (most of all) money you'd spend doing this you could send bot
        • I don't know enough information to do an economic feasibility study - I was just addressing the concerns of Stormcrow309 that it would not work. It obviously would work, but as you point out it might not be worth the cost.

    • by rodrigoandrade ( 713371 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @09:00AM (#49510207)
      > Just leaves smaller material in orbit.

      Yes, then you have to shoot them again to score more points. At least this doesn't have B&W vector graphics.
      • Little did I know that this was the long-term plan planted by the Government implemented by Atari. My years of playing Asteroids will now lead me to picked up by a government van, dropped at Fort Lauderdale, where I will be immediately transported into space to fill my destiny.

        Just like The Last Starfighter! (Did I date myself too much...)

    • Doesn't work

      Yes it does.

      Here is the problem. Blowing up or melting items does not work.

      Here is the solution: don't do either of those things.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Why not use a giant magnifying glass instead?

  • by zipherx ( 1150327 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @08:57AM (#49510165) Homepage
    Just imagine, you are done with they days duties on-board the ISS, then you slip into your jumpsuit and grab a stick and shoot down space junk. This is simply put, SPACE INVADERS for real :D
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Yeah, right, this technology will totaly be used against space junk and not against sattelites of foreign countries.

  • This is not exactly how I envisioned the ISS years and years ago - as a kind of space going pooper-scooper.

    Unless the laser can cause the space junk to emit reaction mass - from the space junk, I don't see how heating it with a laser is going to be effective. It's space-junk, after all - and while we sort of know what we put up there (for certain values of "we") I doubt we know the characteristics well enough to blast the stuff from orbit well enough to avoid causing more problems.

    Lastly, 3000 tons (metric

  • Aerogel (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Launch "Aerogel" producing satellite robot.

    Grow immense Aerogel sponge(s).

    Push the sponge(s) through the most contaminated orbits.

  • Finally.... Lasers doing cool shit! Que the song about it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • by jpellino ( 202698 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @09:06AM (#49510295)
    so why bother.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    3,000 tons of space junk. What was the scientific community thinking, that putting a ring of trash in orbit traveling faster than the speed of a bullet wouldn't pose a hazard someday?
    • When you run a marathon, nobody asks the runners why they don't bring all of their own water on the run.

      When you're payload mass fraction to get into orbit is less than 2%, there's little incentive to keep spare fuel for decommissioning, and that doesn't count all of the little bits that fall off along the way.

    • by hab136 ( 30884 )

      All of it will eventually deorbit, it just might take a while.

      Much of the trash is from military and commercial launches - singling out "the scientific community" is silly.

  • better links (Score:5, Informative)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @09:09AM (#49510309)

    there is a better article here: http://www.csmonitor.com/Scien... [csmonitor.com]
    you can read the full paper (for free) here: http://www.researchgate.net/pr... [researchgate.net]

  • Power (Score:4, Insightful)

    by MrLint ( 519792 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @09:09AM (#49510323) Journal

    My understanding (as very limited as it is), is that you'd need to ablate enough material off the object to knock it out of orbit and to fall to earth.

    However do you even need to hit it that hard? Can you just put enough laser energy on to it to perturb it out of orbit without ablating/vaporizing material? More massive objects would of course require more power applied.

    • I think the problem is available surface area to aim the laser at. In order to generate enough force to slow a satelite down over a year you'd probably need to focus enough power at it that it would melt in short order anyway. HTH
    • Can you just put enough laser energy on to it to perturb it out of orbit without ablating/vaporizing material?

      In theory, yes. Light does exert pressure on objects.... In practice, the pressure is so infinitesimally small that's is much easier* to go the ablation/vaporization route.

      That being said, this device isn't actually useful other than as a proof-of-concept ISS's altitude (400km) is low enough that debris is eventually slowed and de-orbited by atmospheric drag, and the 100km range isn't enough to

  • One flaw (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @09:09AM (#49510325)
    Ok, this is a nice plan and all, but there is one little problem: how do you keep the sharks alive in a vacuum?
  • I'm not putting space lasers on something the Russians can fuck with... At this point, I've gone full cold war on the Russians in my foreign policy thinking. I've had a few conversations with the Church of Putin and they're so fucking delusional that I have zero hope of a peaceful end to this crap. And that being the case, I don't want to give the russians any leverage on us what so ever.

    I'm not really worried about the Russians doing anything to the laser. I'm more worried about us CARING about the ISS. Th

    • by Noryungi ( 70322 )

      Oh boy, that was such a flame-bait post.

      Just cool down, man, the ISS is still up there and still useful -- this (shooting space junk) is just a good example of it.

      Besides, if the US Governement had invested in space research and (cheap, reliable) space access, you guys would not be at the tender mercies of the naughty naughty Russian bear. So you only have yourselves to blame here...

      • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

        by Karmashock ( 2415832 )

        As to flame baits... I am internet fearless... so I don't care.

        As to the ISS being useful... its purpose was to bridge relations with the Russians. It failed. Absent that we would not have built it at all.

        As to shooting space junk, remind me why we need to put a space laser on the ISS and not just on anything at all? We could have a space junk shooting satellite. The Russians will accuse us of putting weapons in space but what is new.

        As to the Russians not being able to put pressure on the US if we didn't m

  • by kqc7011 ( 525426 ) on Monday April 20, 2015 @09:24AM (#49510477)
    All the laser has to do is slow the junk down, just shining the object with the laser will impart a force which will cause a slowing of momentum. Once momentum of the object has slowed below orbital speed, it should fall towards earth and burn up in the atmosphere. Tracking should not be that hard as radar aimed weapons have been around for many years. How much energy and for how long to illuminate is up to the designers.
    • Once momentum of the object has slowed below orbital speed, it should fall towards earth and burn up in the atmosphere.

      Slowing it below orbital speed just makes the whole problem 100x harder due to the vastly increased amount of time you need to hold the laser steady on target. All you actually need to do is get the periapsis down to around 200-300km, and atmospheric drag will do the rest.

      Tracking should not be that hard as radar aimed weapons have been around for many years.

      Tracking isn't the pro

  • This is supposed to be a technically-minded site, not FARK.

    "Blasting" with lasers? Really?

    - first, nothing gets "blasted" with a laser; a laser is - optimally - a point extreme heat source. The "shooting crap down" thing going on in the military today really is about DISABLING the guidance, control, or propulsive systems on whatever aerial platform they're shooting at, or at least disrupting (for missiles) their aerodynamics enough that their own velocity tears them apart. The laser "blasts" nothing. Di

  • Sure, its for frying space junk. Ya, that is far more comforting than outfitting the space-station with a space-to-ground death ray.
  • I see a couple problems.
    1. lasers don't magically make things go away like in the cartoons. They just break it into smaller pieces by making it hot
    2. photons don't impart much inertial energy onto an object compared to radiation beams
    3. the space station has very limited power and it is carefully allocated to good use
  • I've always been told we're having difficulty getting enough stuff into space to build a decent sized base.3,000 tons is an awful lot of raw materials.

    New TV series. You cross Monster Garage with Survivor. First one to build a shelter lives.
  • was getting larger. Then it struck me.
  • to get rid of the slop, you have to net it and destroy it. the Japanese have proposed a craft to net the slop and burn it up on re-entry. that's a PLAN.

  • what could possibly go wrong with this plan? would a laser that powerful represent a destabilizing weapon? If you can de-orbit "space junk" what else can you de-orbit? How could you regain control over a ISS taken by person(s) intent on using it as a weapon?

"I'm a mean green mother from outer space" -- Audrey II, The Little Shop of Horrors

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