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Tag: space junk

  • Gizmodo Science Fair: A Spacecraft That Hunts Down Space Junk

    Astroscale is a 2025 Gizmodo Science Fair winner for developing a satellite designed to rendezvous with space junk, with the goal of capturing it and guiding it toward a fiery grave in Earth’s atmosphere.

    The question

    Can the space industry develop new technologies that help tackle the growing problem of debris and create a more sustainable orbital environment?

    The results

    On February 18, 2024, Astroscale launched its ADRAS-J (Active Debris Removal by Astroscale-Japan) mission on board Rocket Lab’s Electron rocket. The goal of the mission was to demonstrate its ability to approach, observe, and characterize a defunct spacecraft.

    Launch of ADRAS-J. © Astroscale

    The mission target was Japan’s H-2A rocket’s upper stage. This chunk of space junk has been in orbit for nearly 15 years, measuring approximately 36 feet long (11 meters) and weighing 6,613 pounds (3 tons). “Early in the program, we had a whole list of candidates,” Hisashi Inoue, chief engineer at Astroscale Japan, told Gizmodo. “We picked the target that wasn’t farthest away, and we also had some ground observations and information on the target and how it’s behaving.”

    Around three months after its launch, the ADRAS-J mission came within nearly 50 feet (15 meters) of the defunct rocket stage. With its unprecedented close approach, Astroscale became the first company to approach a large piece of space debris. It was a challenging feat, Inoue explained, as the debris is flying in space at a speed of 4 miles per second (7 kilometers per second), or faster than the speed of a bullet.

    As opposed to other rendezvous missions, the company could not communicate with the defunct rocket part. “This is junk, it’s not telling us where it is or how it’s moving,” he said. “So that makes it more complicated than just talking with a cooperative client.”

    Since its target is not equipped with GPS, the ADRAS-J spacecraft had to rely on limited ground-based observations to locate and rendezvous with the spent second stage. Despite the challenges, the satellite was successful in creeping up on its target and performing a fly-around to capture images and data of the upper stage.

    ADRAS-J served as a demonstration mission, paving the way for a follow-up that will attempt to remove the debris for real. For Astroscale’s second mission, the satellite will attempt to match the tumble rate of the wayward rocket, align itself, and dock with it. Once it’s docked, the satellite will grab the rocket with a robotic arm and lower its orbit using its thrusters before releasing it on a trajectory toward Earth’s atmosphere. The decommissioned vehicle will then burn up in Earth’s atmosphere, putting an end to its stint in orbit.

    Why they did it

    Millions of pieces of space debris are currently flying in Earth orbit, with roughly 1.2 million of them larger than 0.4 inches (1 centimeter), according to a recent report by the European Space Agency. That’s large enough to cause catastrophic damage to other spacecraft if it collides with them.

    “If you think about the terrestrial auto industry, there are all these different services performed after the car is used by the first person. It’s reused, refurbished, or recycled, and goes to second-hand use,” Inoue said. “But in space, you use [a spacecraft] once and you throw it away, but that’s not good for sustainability.”

    Nobu Okada founded Astroscale in 2013, focusing on orbital debris removal and in-orbit satellite servicing. The Tokyo-based company aims to reduce the growing amount of space junk not only by physically removing defunct spacecraft but also by extending the lifespan of satellites in space.

    “By combining all those things, I don’t think we, as Astroscale itself, can change the world’s sustainability, but we’re hoping this will kind of jump-start some of the servicing-type missions, and customers will endorse this way of thinking,” Inoue said. “Hopefully in the future, this will connect to sustainable use of space.”

    Why they’re a winner

    At a time when space startups are focused on launching more satellites, spacecraft, and rockets into orbit to cash in on the commercial use of space, Astroscale is one of the few companies promoting a sustainable practice that will allow others to coexist in the orbital environment.

    7642 Members Of Astroscale Japan
    Members Of Astroscale Japan © Astroscale

    The company is not only aiming to remove orbital debris but also to enable satellite inspection, relocation, refueling, and other life-extension services. Astroscale is pioneering sustainable use of Earth orbit in hopes that other companies follow suit and that governments worldwide set requirements for the use of space.

    What’s next

    Astroscale’s upcoming satellite is set for launch sometime in 2027, taking all the data and lessons learned from ADRAS-J and applying them to the follow-up mission.

    ADRAS-J2 is designed to actively remove the defunct Japanese rocket from orbit using Astroscale’s in-house robotic arm technology to capture it and lower its orbit. “We’re currently in the design phase,” Inoue said. “Eventually we’ll start getting more hardware in the lab and start testing it, and then start building the spacecraft next year.”

    The team

    Key members of the Astroscale team include Nobu Okada, founder and CEO; Chris Blackerby, chief operating officer; Mike Lindsay, chief technology officer; Nobuhiro Matsuyama, chief financial officer; Melissa Pane, mission and system engineer; Arielle Cohen, flight software engineer; and Gene Fujii, chief engineer.

    Click here to see all of the winners of the 2025 Gizmodo Science Fair.

    Passant Rabie

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  • Video: Space junk crashed through family’s roof, NASA says

    Video: Space junk crashed through family’s roof, NASA says

    A mysterious object, suspected to be space debris, crashed into a Florida family’s home, leaving them in shock and seeking answers.”It used to have a cylindrical shape and you can tell by the shape of the top that it traveled in this direction through the atmosphere where it burned, creating this burn and melting the metal over in this direction,” said Alejandro Otero, the Naples homeowner.Otero believes the object could be either space junk or a meteorite. “It’s either space junk or a space meteorite. It’s 50/50,” he stated.Otero’s son was home alone at the time of the incident and heard a loud bang. “It was a tremendous sound. And it almost hit my son. He was two rooms over and heard it all,” Otero recalled.After discovering the object, Otero contacted the Collier County Sheriff’s Office. In a video, he expressed his disbelief, “Is it heavy? Holy Cow. Are you kidding me,” as his son pulled the object out of a hole in the floor. Otero was in shock after the incident. “I was shaking, I was completely in disbelief. What are the chances of something landing on my house with such force to cause so much damage? And you know, totally, you know, I’m super grateful that nobody got hurt,” he said.Otero suspects the object could be debris from the International Space Station (ISS).NASA confirmed it was from the ISS on Monday.”The International Space Station will perform a detailed investigation of the jettison and re-entry analysis to determine the cause of the debris survival and to update modeling and analysis, as needed,” NASA said.The debris was a stanchion from their flight support equipment, weighing in at 1.6 pounds and is 4 inches tall and 1.6 inches in diameter.Watch the video above for more on this story.

    A mysterious object, suspected to be space debris, crashed into a Florida family’s home, leaving them in shock and seeking answers.

    “It used to have a cylindrical shape and you can tell by the shape of the top that it traveled in this direction through the atmosphere where it burned, creating this burn and melting the metal over in this direction,” said Alejandro Otero, the Naples homeowner.

    Otero believes the object could be either space junk or a meteorite.

    “It’s either space junk or a space meteorite. It’s 50/50,” he stated.

    Otero’s son was home alone at the time of the incident and heard a loud bang.

    “It was a tremendous sound. And it almost hit my son. He was two rooms over and heard it all,” Otero recalled.

    After discovering the object, Otero contacted the Collier County Sheriff’s Office.

    In a video, he expressed his disbelief, “Is it heavy? Holy Cow. Are you kidding me,” as his son pulled the object out of a hole in the floor.

    Otero was in shock after the incident.

    “I was shaking, I was completely in disbelief. What are the chances of something landing on my house with such force to cause so much damage? And you know, totally, you know, I’m super grateful that nobody got hurt,” he said.

    Otero suspects the object could be debris from the International Space Station (ISS).

    NASA confirmed it was from the ISS on Monday.

    “The International Space Station will perform a detailed investigation of the jettison and re-entry analysis to determine the cause of the debris survival and to update modeling and analysis, as needed,” NASA said.

    The debris was a stanchion from their flight support equipment, weighing in at 1.6 pounds and is 4 inches tall and 1.6 inches in diameter.

    Watch the video above for more on this story.

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  • SpaceX will deorbit 100 Starlink satellites with unidentified flaw | TechCrunch

    SpaceX will deorbit 100 Starlink satellites with unidentified flaw | TechCrunch

    SpaceX announced today that it will be sending some 100 Starlink satellites to an early retirement after a flaw was identified that could make them a worry later on. Don’t expect a fiery light show, though, and if you use Starlink, your service should be unaffected.

    The announcement explains that “the Starlink team identified a common issue” in this subset of first-generation communication satellites that could “increase the probability of failure.”

    I’ve asked the company for further details and will update this post if I hear back, but based on the description and context, it seems likely that the “failure” in question would mean a loss of control. 17 Starlink satellites are “currently non-maneuverable,” but SpaceX did not say whether this was due to the same issue as the 100 being deorbited.

    Unpowered satellites are more or less just debris, even if at a low orbit like this one they’ll burn up in a few years rather than in a few hundred. One of the criticisms of mega-constellations like Starlink is their potential to contribute to the space junk problem, and SpaceX doesn’t want to be the one people point at when the sky is full of broken satellites.

    That explains why, with these satellites were working perfectly well despite their age, SpaceX has decided to initiate controlled descents to take them out of orbit.

    The descents will be triggered “in the coming weeks and months,” but these satellites aren’t capable of big moves, so this is more of a nudge in the downward direction. The deorbit process will actually take about six months, during which they will also “take maneuver responsibility for any high-risk conjunctions,” meaning if they happen to cross paths with another satellites, the Starlink ones will politely move out of the way.

    They will fall one by one, not all together, so don’t bother watching the skies.

    Users of Starlink need not fear, however, since there are still thousands of functioning satellites up there. Nearly 6,000 have been launched to date, and 406 have been deorbited, and others may not be operational, but there are more then enough of them to serve customers.

    Devin Coldewey

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  • It Would Cost $65 Million To Display 60-Second Commercials In Twilight Above Cities. What A Disgusting Idea

    It Would Cost $65 Million To Display 60-Second Commercials In Twilight Above Cities. What A Disgusting Idea

    Light pollution is a serious problem for humanity and it’s getting worse. The creep of LED lights across the world in the past decade or so has caused skyglow to increase, so much so that urban stargazing is becoming much more difficult.

    Now another insidious kind of light pollution is being talked up in a recent study published in the journal Aerospace.

    It looks at the possibility of a space advertising mission. Yes, that’s right—advertising in the night sky. The researchers from Skoltech, a private university Moscow, Russia, studied the economic feasibility of launching a bunch of satellites into orbit to fly in formation and reflect sunlight to display commercials in the sky above cities.

    This is surely the ultimate definition of space junk.

    “As unrealistic as it may seem, we show that space advertising based on 50 or more small satellites flying in formation could be economically viable,” said Shamil Biktimirov, co-author and a research intern at Skoltech’s Engineering Center.

    They arrived at a tentative cost of $65 million.

    The concept uses small CubeSats that nevertheless each unfurl a 32-square-meter solar sail to maximize reflectiveness, though since they reflect sunlight they would only work in the hour or so after sunset (or before sunrise).

    There are various factors involved that affect how much money could be made, from the cloudiness to the demographics of the city the commercials are shown to.

    The model works by picking the most profitable city within reach and displaying an ad there for one minute before switching to the next one. So perhaps only big cities—already blighted by light pollution—would be visited by these monstrosities.

    There are two aspects of this concept to be worried about.

    The first is that the study finds space advertising to be commercially viable. The authors show that space advertising revenue could reach approximately $2 million per day for a series on one-minute commercials over a profitable city. So the mission would only have to last just over a month to break even. The researchers claim that such a mission could operate for several months.

    The second is the researchers cavalier attitude to light pollution. In the paper the researchers state that light pollution concerns is unwarranted since commercials could only be shown around sunrise or sunset—and not at night—and that it would only make economic sense to show commercials to large cities that are already exposed to permanent light pollution. For example, they wouldn’t be visible from anywhere that observatories study the night sky.

    This is both massively disrespectful to people in cities, hugely damaging to wildlife that live in them and completely misunderstands the value of twilight.

    No, professional astronomy is not done in cities. So what? There are plenty of urban astronomers. I would argue that the majority of amateur astronomers live in cities. Yes, you can go stargazing in London. Go up to the High Line in Manhattan and you’ll find members of the Amateur Astronomers Association of New York looking at stars, planets and galaxies. The last thing the iconic Griffith Observatory in Hollywood, Los Angeles needs is yet more light pollution in the form of logos for car companies or fast food brands.

    Twilight is a gorgeous and incredibly important time. It’s when the birds roost and the stars come out. It’s a time for looking for planets low on the horizon and for spotting a crescent Moon.

    It’s when night’s window opens and always has done. Commercials are for TVs, not twilight.

    Wishing you clear skies and wide eyes.

    Jamie Carter, Senior Contributor

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  • Orbital Station Developer Launches Kickstarter Campaign

    Orbital Station Developer Launches Kickstarter Campaign

    Press Release



    updated: Mar 1, 2018

    The Gateway Foundation is working to build a permanent orbiting space station and wants to enlist an army of drones to repair and maintain space stations and other equipment in the harsh environment of space. And they want the public to help.

    “To best develop human habitats in space, on the Moon and Mars we need fleets of advanced drones that can build structures and repair and maintain equipment,” said Dr. Thomas Spilker, Chief Architect of the Gateway Foundation. “There are few technical advances that could do more to accelerate the development of space than autonomous and remote piloted construction, maintenance, repair and survey drones,” he said.

    The Gateway Foundation aims to build a permanent orbiting station (with artificial ‘gravity’) as a gateway to our solar system and has launched the Orbital Assembly company with the goal of becoming Earth’s first turn-key space construction company. To advance the concept of drones working in space and attract needed investors the Foundation is launching a Kickstarter campaign to produce a high-quality video that describes why drones are necessary to our future in space. See:  www.kickstarter.com/projects/522593384

    Work is already underway at Orbital Assembly to develop such drones. “What is most needed now is widespread understanding that purpose-designed robotic helpers are the pivotal element needed to re-purpose space junk, create large structures and maintain and repair both vehicles and structures in space. Drones are the technological accelerant that, together with lower cost launch vehicles, can finally make the development of space not only possible but practical,” said John Blincow, President of the Gateway Foundation.

    Contact: John Blincow
    ​Phone: 1-800-987-0238  X101
    ​Email: johnblincow@gatewayspaceport.com

    Other Resources:

    Orbital Assembly website:
    ​www.orbitalassembly.com
    ​www.gatewayspaceport.com

    Source: Gateway Foundation

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