Berliner Boersenzeitung - Space junk, not meteorites, remains biggest threat to spacecraft

EUR -
AED 3.853118
AFN 71.487088
ALL 98.351691
AMD 409.273718
ANG 1.891004
AOA 955.659295
ARS 1055.8819
AUD 1.612967
AWG 1.8909
AZN 1.791713
BAM 1.958186
BBD 2.118481
BDT 125.382746
BGN 1.954864
BHD 0.395437
BIF 3099.635186
BMD 1.049043
BND 1.413949
BOB 7.277143
BRL 6.075321
BSD 1.049278
BTN 88.459852
BWP 14.334009
BYN 3.433683
BYR 20561.242475
BZD 2.115017
CAD 1.466756
CDF 3011.802607
CHF 0.930365
CLF 0.037034
CLP 1021.883333
CNY 7.602447
CNH 7.600206
COP 4602.760013
CRC 534.751454
CUC 1.049043
CUP 27.799639
CVE 110.399493
CZK 25.312332
DJF 186.844746
DKK 7.458245
DOP 63.237038
DZD 140.21928
EGP 52.041967
ERN 15.735645
ETB 130.835383
FJD 2.383215
FKP 0.828027
GBP 0.834471
GEL 2.874889
GGP 0.828027
GHS 16.525762
GIP 0.828027
GMD 74.48204
GNF 9042.015322
GTQ 8.10187
GYD 219.525805
HKD 8.16221
HNL 26.514301
HRK 7.483095
HTG 137.717773
HUF 409.871701
IDR 16631.527459
ILS 3.830549
IMP 0.828027
INR 88.403953
IQD 1374.474436
IRR 44138.483745
ISK 144.998255
JEP 0.828027
JMD 166.522864
JOD 0.744093
JPY 161.466076
KES 135.850881
KGS 91.045812
KHR 4211.290929
KMF 495.663583
KPW 944.138287
KRW 1468.476567
KWD 0.32278
KYD 0.874399
KZT 523.928269
LAK 23043.511793
LBP 93961.950734
LKR 305.321955
LRD 188.863681
LSL 18.970511
LTL 3.097551
LVL 0.634556
LYD 5.135256
MAD 10.541642
MDL 19.181099
MGA 4903.066576
MKD 61.374869
MMK 3407.250689
MNT 3564.648001
MOP 8.408664
MRU 41.727834
MUR 49.0118
MVR 16.217958
MWK 1819.451211
MXN 21.316857
MYR 4.670377
MZN 67.044183
NAD 18.970511
NGN 1770.238816
NIO 38.607033
NOK 11.638329
NPR 141.536123
NZD 1.79454
OMR 0.403883
PAB 1.049298
PEN 3.973941
PGK 4.22715
PHP 61.811735
PKR 291.423123
PLN 4.321649
PYG 8174.959041
QAR 3.827663
RON 4.973193
RSD 116.911696
RUB 109.267171
RWF 1432.686323
SAR 3.939045
SBD 8.79471
SCR 15.772293
SDG 630.946122
SEK 11.515901
SGD 1.411939
SHP 0.828027
SLE 23.844842
SLL 21997.91181
SOS 599.641938
SRD 37.234757
STD 21713.071748
SVC 9.181185
SYP 2635.751818
SZL 18.965104
THB 36.344126
TJS 11.185153
TMT 3.67165
TND 3.328154
TOP 2.456962
TRY 36.289233
TTD 7.126818
TWD 34.022525
TZS 2779.964489
UAH 43.543546
UGX 3887.736186
USD 1.049043
UYU 44.724485
UZS 13460.397961
VES 48.842442
VND 26666.672639
VUV 124.544491
WST 2.928499
XAF 656.769623
XAG 0.03462
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.835091
XDR 0.802578
XOF 656.757086
XPF 119.331742
YER 262.182031
ZAR 18.932178
ZMK 9442.575435
ZMW 28.933351
ZWL 337.791413
  • CMSC

    0.1078

    24.78

    +0.44%

  • BTI

    0.0130

    37.393

    +0.03%

  • RIO

    0.7000

    63.05

    +1.11%

  • BP

    -0.4650

    29.255

    -1.59%

  • BCE

    0.0810

    26.851

    +0.3%

  • SCS

    0.5450

    13.815

    +3.94%

  • BCC

    10.2350

    154.015

    +6.65%

  • CMSD

    0.2150

    24.675

    +0.87%

  • GSK

    0.1550

    34.115

    +0.45%

  • NGG

    0.0550

    63.165

    +0.09%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13.38

    +1.27%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    46.54

    -0.45%

  • AZN

    0.5150

    66.145

    +0.78%

  • VOD

    0.1920

    8.922

    +2.15%

  • RBGPF

    -0.9500

    59.24

    -1.6%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    6.75

    -0.74%

Space junk, not meteorites, remains biggest threat to spacecraft
Space junk, not meteorites, remains biggest threat to spacecraft / Photo: Samantha CRISTOFORETTI - NASA/ESA/AFP/File

Space junk, not meteorites, remains biggest threat to spacecraft

Dodging the kind of meteorite strike that forced Russia to plan a space station rescue mission is nearly impossible, yet the greater threat to spacecraft is actually the man-made debris in orbit, experts say.

Text size:

Russian announced on Wednesday a February mission to the International Space Station to pick up crew members left stranded after a strike damaged the capsule that was to take them home.

Didier Schmitt, the European Space Agency's head of human and robotic exploration, said it was not rare for tiny meteorites to hit the space station.

The micrometeorites can be travelling at speeds from 10 to 30 kilometres (6-18 miles) a second -- "much faster than a shotgun bullet," Schmitt said.

That is why, when the space station's large observation window is not in use, it is shuttered with "very, very thick layers of protective materials," he said.

The small meteorites come from so far away in the distant universe and at such high speeds that they cannot realistically be tracked, he said.

But space agencies do monitor known meteor showers, such as one expected in early August.

NASA has previously said that the Geminid meteor shower in December was unlikely to have hit the Soyuz capsule, as the hull was penetrated from a different direction.

- What about space junk? -

While meteorites might sound scary, the biggest threat to spacecraft is believed to be from orbital debris -- disused satellites and other human-made objects spinning around Earth known as "space junk".

That is because colliding space junk creates even more debris, leading to a "runaway chain reaction" of cascading collisions littering orbit with tiny, dangerous objects, NASA says.

There are half a million pieces of debris the size of a marble and 100 million pieces measuring around one millimetre in orbit, the UN Office for Outer Space Affairs said last month.

Stefania Soldini, a space engineering lecturer at the UK's Liverpool University, said that "millimetre-sized orbital debris represents the highest mission-ending risk to most robotic spacecraft operating in low Earth orbit".

The ISS is "the most heavily shielded spacecraft" against such debris, Soldini said.

The space station has orbital shields to protect it from debris of less than 1.5 centimetres in size.

But space is only becoming more crowded.

Around 35 percent of the 14,000 satellites ever launched into space entered orbit in just the last three years -- and 100,000 more satellites could potentially be added over the next decade, said the UN office.

- Missiles in space? -

Countries using missiles to shoot down their satellites for weapons tests has also significantly added to the pile of space junk.

Russia provoked criticism from NASA in 2021 when Moscow destroyed one of its own satellites during a missile test, creating more than 1,500 pieces of debris and forcing those onboard the ISS to take shelter.

China created more than 3,500 pieces of large, trackable debris when it shot down one of its weather satellites in 2007, according to NASA.

Accidental clashes have also increased in recent decades. More than 2,300 pieces of new debris were also shot into orbit when a disused Russian military satellite smacked into a US Iridium communications satellite in 2009.

The US Department of Defense tracks objects orbiting Earth, mostly those larger than 10 centimetres (about four inches).

If a larger piece of debris is seen heading towards the ISS, its thrusters move the football pitch-sized space station out of the way.

In 2021, the ISS adjusted to avoid debris known to have originated from China's 2007 anti-satellite test.

- Biggest threat to astronauts? -

For now, the "big problem" is that without Soyuz capsule MS-22 capsule, around half of the seven crew on board have no ride home, Schmitt said.

Normally if a critical event occurred on the station, the crew would hypothetically be able to return to Earth within three hours.

But now "there is a risky period where we cannot get everybody back if there is a major threat," Schmitt said.

Russia's space agency Roscosmos said that a new spaceship would be sent to the ISS on February 20 to retrieve two cosmonauts and an astronaut who initially planned to take the Soyuz MS-22 capsule home.

In normal times, the biggest threat to the astronauts on the ISS was probably fire breaking out, Schmitt said, adding: "You cannot open the windows".

He named solar flares as another danger -- not to mention the myriad dangers that await those planning to jet off on upcoming missions to the Moon and Mars.

"Human space exploration is risky," he said.

(O.Joost--BBZ)