Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Space China

Huge Rocket Looks Set For Uncontrolled Reentry Following Chinese Space Station Launch (spacenews.com) 135

Hmmmmmm shares a report from SpaceNews: The Long March 5B, a variant of China's largest rocket, successfully launched the 22.5-metric-ton Tianhe module from Wenchang Thursday local time. Tianhe separated from the core stage of the launcher after 492 seconds of flight, directly entering its planned initial orbit. Designed specifically to launch space station modules into low Earth orbit, the Long March 5B uniquely uses a core stage and four side boosters to place its payload directly into low Earth orbit. However this core stage is now also in orbit and is likely to make an uncontrolled reentry over the next days or week as growing interaction with the atmosphere drags it to Earth. If so, it will be one of the largest instances of uncontrolled reentry of a spacecraft and could potentially land on an inhabited area.

The high speed of the rocket body means it orbits the Earth roughly every 90 minutes and so a change of just a few minutes in reentry time results in reentry point thousands of kilometers away. The Long March 5B core stage's orbital inclination of 41.5 degrees means the rocket body passes a little farther north than New York, Madrid and Beijing and as far south as southern Chile and Wellington, New Zealand, and could make its reentry at any point within this area. The most likely event will see any debris surviving the intense heat of reentry falling into the oceans or uninhabited areas, but the risk remains of damage to people or property.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Huge Rocket Looks Set For Uncontrolled Reentry Following Chinese Space Station Launch

Comments Filter:
  • by MoHaG ( 1002926 ) on Wednesday May 05, 2021 @03:17AM (#61349248) Homepage
    Another rockets did a similar re-entry in 2020 [spacenews.com]. It is not a failure, but by design... (which does not feel clear from the article or summary) Another rockets also did it in 2016 [spaceflightnow.com].
    • But it is much safer to let it re-enter than leverage it up there. If it collided with anything up there at significant velocity, it will end up as thousands of small bits of space debris. That is becoming a problem. The likelihood is that it will break up into small pieces and those will burn up and all but a few will never impact the ground. Those that do are very likely to miss everything. Anyway, as a vast majority of the surface of earth has nothing to destroy on it. The story is very click-baity thoug
    • by thermopile ( 571680 ) on Wednesday May 05, 2021 @04:13AM (#61349334) Homepage
      The article summary could have been more clear. This appears to be a feature, not a bug, of the Long March 5B rocket - although the Chinese aren't exactly being 100% forthcoming on it, either.

      The first stage of most rockets don't reach orbit, so they intentionally return in a harmless zone. The Long March 5B (both this launch and the initial launch of the design in May 2020) first stage reaches orbit ... and does not have enough fuel for attitude control or an intentional de-orbit burn.

      So, the dry weight of ~21 tons will fall back to Earth ... somewhere. This is about 10x bigger than the average mass of "uncontrolled re-entry" and pretty irresponsible of the Chinese.
      • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Wednesday May 05, 2021 @05:49AM (#61349420)

        ...So, the dry weight of ~21 tons will fall back to Earth ... somewhere. This is about 10x bigger than the average mass of "uncontrolled re-entry" and pretty irresponsible of the Chinese.

        When discussing something as potentially deadly as this, irresponsible isn't exactly the word that comes to mind.

      • This appears to be a feature, not a bug, of the Long March 5B rocket - although the Chinese aren't exactly being 100% forthcoming on it, either.

        Which usually means a fuckup. If everything is going as planned, you brag about it.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It's certainly possible they designed it without any plan for controlled re-entry, just like Skylab or some of the Russian vehicles and space stations.

        It's irresponsible but also less than what other countries have done previously. Skylab, for example, was around 25 tons and parts of it were expected to hit the ground intact rather than breaking up or burning up.

        • It's irresponsible but also less than what other countries have done previously.

          Previous irresponsibility or irresponsibility of others is not an acceptable justification for continued irresponsibility.

      • by MoHaG ( 1002926 )

        Yep, it is not a great design. (Adding a tiny amount of extra fuel or a small rocket (If it is low enough for the orbit to decay quickly enough, not much delta-V should needed to put a higher drag part of the orbit in a predictable place) to deorbit it in a predictable area would have been better). The summary / article leaves the impression that it is some kind of failure though.

        The chance of it doing significant damage seems quite low though...

    • Another rockets did a similar re-entry in 2020 [spacenews.com]. It is not a failure, but by design... (which does not feel clear from the article or summary) Another rockets also did it in 2016 [spaceflightnow.com].

      If raining debris down on humans creating one of the largest instances of uncontrolled reentry of a spacecraft is by design, then where the fuck is the international safety committee that by design should be stepping in and stopping that kind of shit from happening?

      Sure as hell hope no one gets hurt.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Aehm, what? On a global scale, there is not relevant risk here. That committee you are calling for would not even have this thing on the long list of relevant threats to human life.

    • There is such thing as a design failure.

      • by MoHaG ( 1002926 )
        True, the design deserves criticism, but the articles almost make it seem as if it is something new that was discovered (that control of the booster was lost), instead it was something that was known before the launch, since the other launch of the same rocket did the same... (But the article as it stands is easier to write and has a more clickbaity title a decent critique would have...)
    • By design, like the previous ones.

      That sounds even worse... the PR is especially entertaining when one side has the self-awaereness that the ChiComs don't.

      Good times; too bad I rarely drink.

    • consider.
      reporters got the planet name correctly

    • Cheaper to pay for somebody's car or cow if it happens to land on one, than to add the extra weight and complexity to the launch vehicle. That wouldn't fly for the US because somebody would gets the pants sued off of em, but good luck with suing China.
  • This happened last year [arstechnica.com] as well.

    • by v1 ( 525388 )

      If they keep launching rockets from the same location that are trying for the same orbit, it'll probably just keep happening, raising the overall risk for that strip of land in the drop-zone.

      Anyone remember when Skylab fell and landed bits in Australia, and NASA got fined for littering? Wiipedia has a good amount of information on the outcome of the de-orbit of Skylab.

      It'll be interesting to see how things work out the first time we see real damage occur from an uncontrolled re-entry. I suppose it's only

      • The real problem is they designed this like a missile, not a regular launcher. The first stage goes all the way to orbit. It really needs to be sub-orbital so that it has a passive and active system . Once in orbit, if you lose control, well... That is what we have now.
        • by v1 ( 525388 )

          I was thinking their problem is more a matter of
          A) not having any RCS thrusters on the first stage
          B) not being able to relight the first stage engine in space (this is not an easy thing to do)
          C) not bothering with any first stage independent control since they can't A or B.
          D) they didn't make any effort to do it because they simply don't care where it lands.

          • A & B is true if going orbital.
            OTOH, had they simply kept it sub-orbital, it would technically not be needed.

            Problem was, D. They really do not give a fuck.
          • by MoHaG ( 1002926 )
            They could probably add a relatively small solid fuel rocket just for deorbiting... (But they'll still need A and C) (It just needs to be able to dip the orbit a bit deeper into the atmosphere in the approximate area of an ocean) (It is certainly a bad design, but not a malfunction (I have a problem that the article doesn't make that clear - it presents it as if it is was just discovered, instead of as a criticism of the design))
    • This happened last year [arstechnica.com] as well.

      Let's not forget Tiangong-1 [wikipedia.org] back in 2018.

  • At least we were warned.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      At least we were warned.

      This is slashdot
      We'll be warned again a few days after it crashes too.

    • At least we were warned.

      Which is about as effective as removing the blindfold while standing in front of a firing squad.

      "Heads up, here it comes."

  • by nagora ( 177841 ) on Wednesday May 05, 2021 @04:33AM (#61349356)

    Just as soon as China has stolen all the details of Musk's rockets, this problem will go away.

  • This must be some new meaning to "uniquely". The Russians have been doing this for, what, 60+ years?

    • by billyswong ( 1858858 ) on Wednesday May 05, 2021 @06:37AM (#61349500)
      Traditionally rockets in Russia and also rockets in China (that they learnt / copied from Russia) have at least 2 core stages, one lower and one upper, that separate before entering orbit. The debris that get into orbit are much smaller and lighter, making them safe for uncontrolled fall. There may be rare single-core-stage exception for very light payload, but for those cases such core stage will also be smaller and lighter proportionally.
  • Not unless they get it back intact for inspection by their NAR witness.

  • Hey..It’s not convenient out here. Why don’t we chat there ==>> https://mub.me/id4278 [mub.me]
  • WTF?!?!?! Gamble with YOUR life, not mine!

    If I want to play Russian Roulette, let me do it on my terms!
    Right now, and for the foreseeable future, I choose to NOT risk me life.

    How about we let the debris rain down directly on Xi Jinping?

Never test for an error condition you don't know how to handle. -- Steinbach

Working...