A European Space Agency satellite risks colliding with a piece of space debris about 15 centimeters (a half-foot) long this week, forcing ESA's flight control to plan a rare evasive maneuver.
A piece of an old Russian satellite called Cosmos-375 is forecast to miss Swarm-B, one of ESA's three Swarm satellites that measure Earth's magnetic fields, by just over the length of a football field. But the margin of error for that forecast is around 1,000 meters (3,280 feet or more like three football fields).
ESA has been working with data from the US armed forces' Joint Space Operations Center (JSpOC), located at Vandenberg Air Force base in California, to plan a collision avoidance maneuver that would be uploaded to the satellite Wednesday.
If the satellite is able to alter its orbit as planned, the piece of junk should pass 746 meters (2,448 feet) in front of Swarm-B and 56 meters (184 feet) below it.
Pretty interesting that they are able to track a 15cm piece of debris.
Source:
https://www.cnet.com/news/european-space-agency-orbiter-russian-satellite-space-junk-this-week/
-- submitted from IRC
(Score: 2) by dry on Friday January 27 2017, @04:30AM
Isn't an American football field about 100 yards due to Harvard not having a proper field? Canadian football has a 110 yard field, which works out to close enough to 100 metres, which means 10 Canadian football fields or 11 American football fields unless you're including end zones (20 yards x 2 unless American where it is half that). All references to football mean gridiron football. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gridiron_football [wikipedia.org] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_American_and_Canadian_football#History [wikipedia.org]