NASA’s defunct Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) is due to re-enter Earth’s atmosphere sometime between today and this Saturday, although scientists are unable to accurately predict where it will eventually land.
The 20-year old 6.5 ton satellite, which ran out of fuel in 2005, was originally expected to fall in late September or early October. However, due to a sharp increase in solar activity, its arrival is coming faster and more “unpredictable” than expected.
While the vast majority of the bus-sized satellite will burn up upon re-entering Earth’s atmosphere, small pieces of debris no heavier than 350 pounds will land somewhere on Earth.
One potential re-entry path of UARS occurs over Ireland each night this week, according to Astronomy Ireland. The projected flight path varies from Galway to Wexford and from Clare to Waterford on different nights. If the satellite does re-enter over Ireland, observers will see an extremely bright “meteor-like” object blazing across the sky.
It’s worth noting that no person has ever been injured or property been significantly damaged by falling satellite debris since the beginning of the space age over 50 years ago.
AI chatbots are transforming communication, but recent headlines reveal their darker side: lawsuits over harmful content and reports…
DPI systems can just as easily exclude people from participating in some aspects of society…
HR has always had far-reaching responsibilities, however its focus has long been on employee retention…
Longview Fusion Energy Systems has announced its role as a key contributor to two of the…
As CFOs battle tough odds, accounting solutions help to drive new efficiencies More than anything,…
Could 'Kallisti' be the beginning of another Trojan Horse scenario? perspective The US Defense Advanced…
View Comments
any news on this????
any news on this????
It has been photographed over Northern France http://j.mp/oo2ggO but should fall to earth on Friday
It has been photographed over Northern France http://j.mp/oo2ggO but should fall to earth on Friday