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Communications Space Earth NASA

Tiny Particle Blows Hole In European Satellite's Solar Panel (go.com) 225

An anonymous reader quotes a report from ABC News: A tiny piece of debris has punched a gaping hole in the solar panel of one of Europe's Earth observation satellites, causing visible damage but not enough to affect its routine operations, the European Space Agency said Wednesday. The unknown particle just a few millimeters big slammed into the back of a solar panel on Copernicus Sentinel-1A on Aug. 23. Using on-board cameras, engineers have determined that the hole is about 40 centimeters (16 inches) in diameter. The European Space Agency said the loss of power caused by the strike is "relatively small" -- less than 5 percent of the wing's usual output. The likelihood of such a strike is calculated at between 1:35 and 1:130 during the satellite's five-year lifetime, said Holger Krag, who heads the agency's space debris office. While the particle probably had a mass of less than 1 gram (0.04 ounces), scientists calculated that it was traveling at up to 40,000 kilometers an hour (24,856 mph) when it hit Sentinel-1A. Space.com has posted a video about the incident, showing images taken before and after the impact.
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Tiny Particle Blows Hole In European Satellite's Solar Panel

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  • At last! (Score:4, Funny)

    by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:05AM (#52806955)
    Someone found that screw we lost in space!
  • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:07AM (#52806957)

    Using on-board cameras, engineers have determined that the hole is about 40 centimeters (16 inches) in diameter.

    That's 0.00198838 furlongs for those too lazy to do the conversion.

    I think slashdot readers are fine with having just the metric units. Anyone who couldn't do the conversion in their head if they cared probably isn't reading slashdot.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Even then, I doubt that there are many people who do not have a feeling for how big 40 cm is, even in countries where inches and feet are still in use.

    • by jabuzz ( 182671 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @07:38AM (#52807127) Homepage

      If you are going to do a unit conversion then learn about significant digits. So 0.0020 furlongs is the actual conversion for people that actually know about units and measurement.

      • by sjbe ( 173966 )

        If you are going to do a unit conversion then learn about significant digits.

        If you are going to be pedantic then learn about irony.

    • Sorry, that means nothing to me. What is it in terms of football fields?
    • I prefer my units in beard seconds [wikipedia.org] you insensitive clod!
    • Anyone who couldn't do the conversion in their head if they cared probably isn't reading slashdot.

      Not so sure about that. You have to take into account all of the political trolls that generate a lot (most?) of the site traffic these days.

  • by wkwilley2 ( 4278669 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:16AM (#52806975)

    how much kinetic energy a spec of dust has when it's travelling over 11k m/s.

    • Ek = 1/2 mv^2

      m = 0.001 kg
      v = 11,111 m/s

      Ek = 61727 joules. That's 14 kilocalories, or about as much energy as in 2 ml of alcohol
    • If both objects travel at 11km/s in the same direction around the planet, they do not necessarily have any meaningful speed relative to each other. We do that whenever we dock Progress orbiters onto the ISS, and guess what, they usually don't smash into each other.

      A speed alone means jack (unless close to light speed) if we don't know the reference. That Progress and the ISS both travel at the aforementioned 11km/s relative to a point on the planet below, yet relative to each other they don't move at all. I

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 01, 2016 @06:42AM (#52807015)

    that space debris has created more space debris that will create more space debris that ...

    • Something is going to need to be done soon about the space debris issue.

      Otherwise more satellites are going to start being taken out which will created more debris, which will take out more satellites...

      This issue was first recognized almost 40 years ago [wikipedia.org] and no solutions have been found yet.

    • that space debris has created more space debris that will create more space debris that ...

      ... George Clooney dies and Sandra Bullock ...

    • that space debris has created more space debris that will create more space debris that ...

      Sounds like a good movie plot.

  • And with every tiny particle hitting a piece of space equipment, the likelihood of further collisions is increased.
    I'm pretty sure there is an exponential function in this system, which is worrying. Though thanks to the vastness of space, we are still at a very low level on the progression of that function, if nothing happens at some point the function will take off and cause serious problems.

    • by g3rr!t ( 570129 )
      Mod parent up!
      So, a 1-5 mm piece of debris caused a hole 40cm, i.e. 400mm wide - probably creating hundreds or thousands of pieces of new debris. Since the satellite is in the crowded low earth orbit (apogee 693km [wikipedia.org]), perhaps the chance of it hitting a piece of its own solar panel in the future is probably now higher than "1:35 and 1:130", though those bits would not be traveling quite as (relatively) fast as the original impact.

      Apparently this exponential debris effect is called the Kessler_syndrome [wikipedia.org]
  • Why the heck (Score:5, Insightful)

    by advocate_one ( 662832 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @07:19AM (#52807091)
    does it need a flash video (of all things) to show a before and after image of the panel?
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Build a wall and make the depths of space pay for it!

    !!! TRUMP 2016 !!!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    that is about 60000J of energy, 3 times as much as 50 cal round at 20000J

  • at up to 40,000 kilometers an hour (24,856 mph)

    24854.848 mph to be exact

  • by Luthair ( 847766 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @07:51AM (#52807151)
    Aren't particles microscopic, something that can be measured in millimetres doesn't seem like it ought to be described as a particle...
    • Re:Particle? (Score:5, Informative)

      by The Grim Reefer ( 1162755 ) on Thursday September 01, 2016 @09:48AM (#52807533)

      Aren't particles microscopic, something that can be measured in millimetres doesn't seem like it ought to be described as a particle...

      In physics, yes. But they were using the general definition, which does seem somewhat out of place in this case, but is correct. This is similar to talking about a particle of dust getting into a camera lens.

  • "it was traveling at up to 40,000 kilometers an hour (24,856 mph) when it hit "

    How does something stay in orbit at that speed? I.m sure thats more than escape velocity.

    • How does something stay in orbit at that speed?

      Who said the particle was orbiting the Earth? Or if it was orbiting it might have been a retrograde orbit so the closing velocity was the sum of the two objects.

    • You're right, escape velocity at this altitude is 10.9 km/s. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escape_velocity#List_of_escape_velocities)
      "Up to 40000km/h" is in the same ballpark, so it's hard to know for sure.
      Still, 2 orbiting objects could possibly hit each other at a relative speed twice as high as the orbit velocity.

    • It smacks into a solar panel and loses some of its energy.
  • Serious question here is why is the hole so big?

    If something is small and moving fast, would it not just go right through the panel leaving a small hole?

    Or is the force so great and it 'explodes' on impact with the panel, creating the larger hole.

    • Why do bullets make a small hole when entering and a large hole when exiting? When something like this hits the panel at those relative velocities, the large energies involved essentially vaporize it and some of the material it hit. That vapor (probably mostly plasma at this point) is still moving very quickly. It's essentially an explosion in the panel.

  • "scientists calculated that it was traveling at up to 40,000 kilometers an hour (24,856 mph) when it hit Sentinel-1A."

    40,000 kilometers an hour relative to what exactly? The satellite? The earth? The sun?

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