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Air Force satellite will keep tabs on space junk

By | September 24, 2010, 2:00 PM PDT

Clumsily orbiting near, alongside and occasionally straight into some of the world’s most valuable communications and research equipment, space junk is, without a doubt, a serious problem. To make matters worse, so much of it is literal junk, from decommissioned satellites to unidentifiable metal debris, which is extremely difficult to track–at least, until now.

The Air Force’s awkwardly named Space-Based Space Surveillance satellite (SBSS), due to launch this weekend after nearly a year of delay, isn’t meant to be a cleanup tool. Instead, its primarily goal is to simply find out where the junk is: to track it, to measure it, and to provide scientists enough data to calculate its location.

Space junk has been a creeping concern for years, but it’s quickly becoming urgent. Current estimates place the number of significant man-made objects orbiting around the Earth near 500,000, less than 5% of which is in any way tracked.

It’s difficult to convey what that number means in terms of risk. Graphics like the one above make it seem like an orbiting shuttle would be viciously perforated in the course of a single orbit, while simple mathematical representations border on meaningless. (500,000 pieces of space junk spread evenly along a typical orbital path of the ISS would come out to one piece every 282 feet. Add two more dimensions to this calculation and it loses force; leave them out and it doesn’t bear much resemblance to reality.)

In any case, minor collisions have been documented during shuttle missions, and the ISS has taken evasive action against incoming debris on at least eight occasions in the last 10 years. The SBSS will use its orbital vantage point, and specifically designed instruments, to track debris with an acuity that ground-based equipment lacks, due to lack of mobility, lack of visibility and general unwieldiness. Among the gear on the satellite, according to Space.com:

The SBSS spacecraft will be equipped with a visible sensor mounted on an agile, two-axis gimbal. This device will give ground controllers the flexibility to quickly move the camera between targets without needing to reposition the satellite itself or expend additional fuel.

The data collected by the SBSS should help keep orbiting equipment and crews safer in the short term, and eventually, or rather hopefully, contribute to future efforts to reduce space junk, none of which have, for lack of a better phrase, made it off the ground.

Image courtesy of the ESA

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John Herrman

About John Herrman

John Herrman was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2010 to 2011.

John Herrman

John Herrman

Contributing Editor, Technology

John Herrman is a freelance writer based in New York City. He is also contributing editor at Gizmodo. He holds a degree from the University of Edinburgh.

Follow him on Twitter.

John Herrman

John Herrman

John has nothing to disclose.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Air Force satellite will keep tabs on space junk
The main purpose of SBSS is not likely to track space debris. See our analysis at http://allthingsnuclear.org/

David
Posted by dcw654
27th Sep 2010
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RE: Air Force satellite will keep tabs on space junk
I'm sure it would be a huge undertaking, but at some point we will have to clean up the mess, rather than just monitor it. It seems like somebody is launching a satellite every week, and eventually it's going to get too crowded up there.

It probably wouldn't be practical or safe to bring everything back down to Earth, so shooting it off into space seems like the only option.Yes, this is littering, but on a scale that is infinitely smaller than throwing just one piece of paper in the ocean. So, let the design wars for a cosmic garbage truck with slingshots begin!
Posted by ddferrari
27th Sep 2010
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RE: Air Force satellite will keep tabs on space junk
Moving junk farther into space solves nothing, it would take an extraordinary amount of propellant to move it out of earth orbit, and then it's in the same category as NEOs Near earth orbiting asteroids. 95%+ of the "junk" would be safe to instead de-orbit. Lower the orbital energy enough that it encounters the atmosphere, atmospheric friction causes it to get even lower, and it burns up before reaching the ground. The only objects that would be a problem would be those with plutonium fuel, and those with parts designed to survive reentry. The radioactives, require a stable, high predictable orbit. The junk that would be an impact hazard, has to be handled carefully to enter over an ocean.
Posted by kevinrs1
27th Sep 2010
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RE: Air Force satellite will keep tabs on space junk
Great! Put more junk up to watch other junk! That must have took a single brain cell to come up with this idea.
Posted by jet1959mo@...
1st Oct 2010
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Government Reports Growing Bureacracy Stifles Effectiveness
Representatives have appointed a commission to further study the issue.
Posted by donnydo77@...
5th Oct 2010
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