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posted by martyb on Saturday February 16 2019, @03:14AM   Printer-friendly
from the bits-and-bobs dept.

The research project called RemoveDEBRIS is

an effort to test various space junk removal technologies. The project, which involves a 220-pound satellite in low Earth orbit, is being led by the University of Surrey

In its third test, the project successfully snatched a piece of debris using its space harpoon. The harpoon shot out at 65 feet per second/20 meters per second (0.0007% of the maximum velocity of a sheep in a vacuum) its space-harpoon-claws successfully digging into the target and gaining a firm lock.

Previously, the satellite deployed a net to capture a simulated piece of space junk, and a laser-based camera system was used to locate a floating chunk of space debris. A fourth and final experiment will be conducted in March, when the satellite will pump the brakes by deploying a small sail.

At this point the satellite, and its low orbit loot, will plunge to Earth to burn up in the atmosphere.

The U.S. Space Surveillance Network estimates that around 29,000 objects larger than 10 centimeters are currently floating in Earth orbit, some at speeds approaching 10 kilometers per second, or 6 miles per second.

These bits and bobs can smash into other items in orbit creating even more debris in a cascading Earth enveloping satellite and astronaut destroying shower of doom referred to as the Kessler syndrome, named after Donald J. Kessler who first proposed it in 1978.

Lunar orbit is looking like a better place to be.

Previous Coverage: SpaceX Launches CRS-14 Resupply Mission to the ISS and Space Junk Removal Testing Craft Ejected From the ISS


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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Saturday February 16 2019, @05:07AM

    by takyon (881) <reversethis-{gro ... s} {ta} {noykat}> on Saturday February 16 2019, @05:07AM (#801940) Journal

    *starts reading*

    *starts reading again*

    *stops reading*

    WTF? My guess is blackout drunk, which could allow you to type surprisingly coherently but still end up looking like something OpenAI's algorithm spit out.

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