Cover Image: November 2011 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

On the Trail of Space Trash

The U.S. Air Force has a new plan to track tiny pieces of orbiting debris















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Satellite panel with damage from orbital debris Image: Courtesy of NASA Orbital Debris Program Office

Since the space age began, the orbital realm has become increasingly littered with the detritus of skyward human striving—spent rocket boosters, dead satellites, stray pieces of hardware. Debris is piling up with such speed that it has become a threat to the kind of spacefaring endeavors that spawned it in the first place.

A September report by the National Research Council found that the debris field is so dense that collisions between objects in orbit will create additional debris faster than space junk falls out of orbit. The predicted outcome: an exponential growth of the number of pieces of space debris.

Already millions of pieces of refuse five millimeters and up circle Earth in a high-velocity swarm, each packing enough kinetic energy to disable a satellite. Far more sobering is the threat to human life. In June the six astronauts onboard the International Space Station took shelter in escape capsules when a piece of debris came within a few hundred meters of the station.

The U.S. is now taking preliminary steps to manage the threat of space junk by implementing better tracking systems. Space Fence, a new $6-billion radar system that the U.S. Air Force is planning, could dramatically increase the number of orbital objects under surveillance after it comes online around 2017.

As planned, Space Fence would comprise two radar stations in the Southern Hemisphere, which will take over for a 1960s-era radar system. Whereas the present system operates in the VHF band, Space Fence will use shorter-wavelength S-band radar, which affords better resolution for tracking debris. “The smaller the wavelength, the smaller the objects,” says Scott Spence, director of Raytheon’s Space Fence program. Raytheon and Lockheed Martin are vying for the government contract. The current debris catalogue goes down to roughly softball-size objects, but Space Fence, Spence says, may be able to track objects as small as a marble at lower altitudes.

Space Fence and other smaller-scale projects aim to increase what the military calls “space situational awareness.” How that awareness might progress to remedial action—the removal of orbital debris—remains unclear, though. 



This article was originally published with the title On the Trail of Space Trash.



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  1. 1. jonny hankins 12:31 PM 10/20/11

    This is an argument that has been addressed several times on the Bassetti Foundation website in Milan. We first addressed the problem a couple of years ago and also looked at some new technological innovations that may help to clear up some of the mess. see www.fondazionebassetti.org

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  2. 2. Quinn the Eskimo 08:57 PM 10/20/11

    If we orbit enough atom bombs, then detonate them in unison, we could vaporize most of it.

    Of course we'd have to stay home for the next 23,000 years or so. IT COULD HAPPEN!!!


    .

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  3. 3. ffchen 01:50 PM 10/24/11

    I thought that everything in the same orbit, regardless of its mass, would be traveling at the same speed. How can space junk hit a satellite with a lot of energy?

    Frankffc

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