Categories: Science

An “extremely small” safety risk to the public from plummeting NASA satellite

NASA has warned that one of its defunct satellites will crash into the Earth’s atmosphere sometime over the next six weeks (between late September and early October) and rain debris over a wide area. But it doesn’t know where or when its Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) will re-enter the atmosphere.

This means that NASA cannot yet predict where the remains of the satellite will fall.

The UARS satellite is 10 metres long (35 feet), 4.5 metres in diameter (15 feet), and weighs 5,896 kg (13,000 pounds). It was launched in 1991 to measure the chemical make-up of the upper atmosphere. Credit: NASA

In spite of this the space agency says that there is an “extremely small” safety risk to the public from the falling debris.

It is not unusual for satellites to be destroyed in this way; In 2001 Russia destroyed its Mir Space Station by setting it to fall into the atmosphere.  Roscosmos was able to control Mir’s de-orbit so its debris fell into the South Pacific.

In June 2011 the European Space Agency (ESA) live tweeted the destruction of its Kepler satellite as it plummeted into the South Pacific, 2,500 km east of New Zealand.

NASA does have some predictions for where the satellite debris will fall; somewhere between 57° North latitude  and 57° South latitude, which pretty much means everywhere except the North and South poles. The debris will fall over an area 500 km wide.

NASA said that in the past 60 years no people have been injured from falling space debris, “Since the beginning of the Space Age in the late-1950s, there have been no confirmed reports of an injury resulting from re-entering space objects. Nor is there a record of significant property damage resulting from a satellite re-entry.”

However NASA does warn that if you do see some space debris fall (provided it doesn’t hit you) not to touch it and to call the police.

The warning comes a day after NASA released new high definition images of the Apollo Moon landing sites taken by its Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter satellite.

Ajit Jain

Ajit Jain is marketing and sales head at Octal Info Solution, a leading iPhone app development company and offering platform to hire Android app developers for your own app development project. He is available to connect on Google Plus, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

View Comments

Recent Posts

AI safety for kids a top concern for COPPA compliant AI startups

June means the start of summer is upon us, and as teachers put the 2024-2025…

1 day ago

DARPA to simulate disease outbreaks: model lockdown, vaccination & messaging strategies

Why is DARPA modeling disease outbreaks & intervention strategies while simultaneously looking to predict &…

3 days ago

ManagedMethods launches Advanced Phishing solution against rising tide of malicious emails 

Earlier this year, a report from non-profit organization the Center for Internet Security shone a…

3 days ago

DARPA ‘CoasterChase’ looks to mitigate stress with ingestible neurotech

DARPA is putting together a research program called CoasterChase that aims to mitigate warfighters' stress…

4 days ago

U.S. Fusion Power Plant Design Passes Independent Review

In the global race to develop and commercialize fusion power reactors, U.S. scientists have reached…

4 days ago

Pet Health Meets Convenience: New Partnership Aims to Empower Pet Owners with At-Home Testing

Innovative Pet Lab, a science-forward company offering at-home health tests for pets, today announced a…

1 week ago