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Infographic: The world’s satellites orbiting Earth, by nation

By | February 5, 2010, 1:49 PM PST

Ever wondered about all the junk orbiting the Earth?

(There’s quite a bit, you know.)

Much of that debris is thanks to our preoccupation with sending rockets carrying satellites and other things into space.

Unfortunately, that space debris is quite harmful to satellites, spacecraft and the working astronauts of the International Space Station.

In a neat infographic using data from the UCS Satellite Database, Austrian designer Michael Paukner attempts to map out all the stuff orbiting the Earth — and who’s responsible for it.

Each nation’s share is illustrated in a series of concentric circles: white indicates active satellites, gray designates dysfunctional satellites and black represents pieces of orbital debris greater than 10 centimeters in diameter — sometimes the result of the destruction of an old satellite.

Which nation is the worst offender? Why, none other than the United States, followed by Russia and China.

In fact, the problem is so bad that The Pentagon’s experimental DARPA arm issued a call last September for solutions to clean up space debris.

From that declaration:

Since the advent of the space-age over five decades ago, more than thirty-five thousand man-made objects have been cataloged by the U.S. Space Surveillance Network. Nearly twenty-thousand of those objects remain in orbit today, ninety-four percent of which are non-functioning orbital debris. These figures do not include the hundreds-of-thousands of objects too small to be cataloged, but still large enough to pose a threat to approximately nine-hundred operational satellites in orbit around the Earth. In addition, collisions between debris objects could potentially lead to a continuously growing debris population, thus increasing the risk to operational satellites.

Sounds like we need a space-age dust buster, if you ask me.

Follow Michael Paukner on Twitter.

[via Fast Company]

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Andrew Nusca

About Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca

Editor

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet and an associate editor for ZDNet. Previously, he worked at Money, Men's Vogue and Popular Mechanics magazines. He holds degrees from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and New York University. He based in New York but resides in Philadelphia.

Follow him on Twitter.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca
Andrew Nusca does not hold any investments in the companies he covers.
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RE: Infographic: The world's satellites orbiting Earth, by nation
What about a kevlar trash bag, solar wind powered to scoop up old stuff and then drop it to the atmosphere.
Posted by dthomas175@...
8th Feb 2010
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Not easy
Not easy at all. This is a challenge.
Posted by Altotus
8th Feb 2010
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Yay! I want to to be a Space Trucker NT
.
Posted by SiO2
9th Feb 2010
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The cost to get stuff into orbit is enormous
Therefore if the debris can collected and recycled the cost savings can be enormous.

it will take quite a bit of investment, but given that there is a great deal of free solar power to smelt or vaporize anything if concentrated enough, the incentives may exist to do so.
Posted by LarryPTL
9th Feb 2010
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RE: Infographic: The world's satellites orbiting Earth, by nation
We are a threat to ourselves. How come they don't put flashing lights on them to make light shows at night or advertising boards and make the money the yanks need to keep their space ships running.
Posted by fleety68
10th Feb 2010
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RE: Infographic: The world's satellites orbiting Earth, by nation
The material could be a resorce for future space progects. The metals and stuff has already been boosted to various orbits saving a lot of fuel. Gathering and reusing it might be a money and fuel saver. Who knows study the cost/ saving ratio. Maybe target objects for their content at first. Go for stuff that can be used directly, no smelting or refining just recycle and reuse parts as is. Heck, think of using the motor from a junkward in your Toyota (okay maybe not the brakes though).
Posted by garyfizer@...
10th Feb 2010
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China?
What I find most remarkable here is the large amount of debris (esp. as a proportion of things it's put in orbit) that China's responsible for. The Chinese must have suffered a really high proportion of failures getting their space program up and running. But then, that's the nature of secret space programs--most of the failures are hidden, which distorts people's perception of the program.
Posted by LeonBA
22nd Mar 2010
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RE: Infographic: The world's satellites orbiting Earth, by nation
Who called me ? The information about unknown phone number to find out who owns that number and why they call. Who is calling me.
Posted by EdwardKresge
7th Jun 2010
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