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Booster Explosion in Australian Skies
helvick
post Feb 21 2007, 06:36 PM
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Seems like Robert McNaught captured something else interesting in the Southern Skies last night.
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tty
post Feb 21 2007, 06:51 PM
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Oh dear, that's another load of unnecessary space debris on top of the chinese ASAT test. I thought boosters were supposed to depressurize to avoid this sort of thing.
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post Feb 21 2007, 11:53 PM
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Guess that the depressurization might've been what went wrong as the root cause... sad.gif

Wonder if it might be wise to require (under what authority I can't imagine; UN?) deorbiting systems for upper stages using a small strap-on solid motor or something. Seems wise to get these beasts safely burnt-up as soon as possible after the job's done.


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mchan
post Feb 22 2007, 08:31 AM
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This is done in some cases where it is practical to do so. E.g., after spacecraft separatation, Delta upper stages in low earth orbit will burn remaining propellants to depletion to drop perigee as much as possible to increase atmospheric drag and hasten decay.
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ugordan
post Feb 23 2007, 10:16 AM
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SpaceWeather.com has a great movie taken by Gordon Garrard spanning nearly an hour.

Link to lower resolution video here (4 MB).


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Guest_PhilCo126_*
post Mar 29 2007, 04:17 PM
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Another " space debris " incident here:
http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1087543
ohmy.gif
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post Mar 30 2007, 01:15 AM
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Good grief... ohmy.gif ! Well, at least it re-entered & isn't still up there posing an LEO hazard.

Still, can't have space junk threatening airliners & other things without adequate warning, and this sounds like a complete screw-up on the part of all agencies who's job it is to monitor these events. Might be time to consider establishing an international space junk alert system tied into the ICAO, national civil defense organizations and other concerned parties similar to the International Ice Patrol for maritime concerns...this would be in everyone's interest.


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ugordan
post Mar 30 2007, 08:53 AM
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"Flaming" space junk at a 10 km altitude? Wouldn't any significant kinetic energy be shed much, much higher up and be pretty much travelling at terminal velocity at that altitude? I'd imagine it wouldn't be "flaming" at all, too. How did the pilot determine it was in a 8 kilometer radius anyway? Radar?


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post Mar 30 2007, 05:57 PM
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Good questions, but I can buy off on the 'flaming' a bit...maybe it was still glowing from residual heat. I saw a booster re-entry almost from start to finish (180 deg across the sky!) in absolutely dark skies once when I was a kid in Montana, and when the main body broke up all the chunks were still quite luminous until they went below the horizon...pieces hit near Idaho Falls, ID.


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ugordan
post Mar 30 2007, 06:00 PM
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Yes, but how high were the booster pieces when they appeared to stop glowing? I don't know, it looks to me the pilot actually saw stuff many kilometers in altitude, much higher and farther than 8 km.
I wouldn't expect any junk to retain supersonic speeds all the way to 10 km altitude, let alone speeds to heat up the material.

Then again, I never witnessed anything of the sort so...


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post Mar 30 2007, 09:54 PM
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I agree with you there; seems unlikely that the stated range is accurate, and hard to understand where it came from. Most aircraft (esp. commercial airliners) have X-band weather-avoidance radars, so we're talking about a 3 cm wavelength, which of course could yield good resolution of chunks. However, the newer digital data processing schemes are designed to pick up diffuse rather than discrete targets; PPI mode just isn't the same as it once was.

The pilots might have seen some brief returns as the chunks transited their radar scan region (if they were indeed close enough to them), but I doubt that they persisted long enough to make an accurate range determination...if they showed up on the radar at all.


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edstrick
post Mar 31 2007, 08:33 AM
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In a *CLASSIC* UFO report from the mid to late 60's, a passenger plane somewhere over Kentucky took evasive action to avoid collision with what the pilot reported as a flaming craft. Passengers reported seeing glowing portholes in the "vehicle" and I think somebody said they could see faces looking out (or that's memory embellishment...)

In REALITY, it was a piece of space junk re-entering some 200 miles away over central or northern Ohio.

The Chilean pilot instinctively interpreted the flaming whatever as nearby due to it's relatively large size in the sky. He had no real idea how big or close it was. Jim Oberg has a column, I think on MSNBC, on the event.
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post Mar 31 2007, 10:35 PM
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Regardless, it's scary as hell to see something like that when flying, esp. if you can't accurately determine its range. Aircrews need to be warned about these events so they don't do anything stupid and/or impulsive in response which could jeopardize the safety of all on board. This is particularly true for heavily traveled transoceanic airspace such as that between the CONUS & Europe since the vertical separation distance between E-W routes has been decreased to 500 feet from 1000 feet; if somebody takes unneeded evasive action, you could have a midair.... unsure.gif


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mchan
post Apr 2 2007, 03:00 AM
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The problem is that reentries due to orbit decay are difficult to predict accurately in location and time.
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post Apr 2 2007, 12:41 PM
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Even 24-hour warning that something was coming in somewhere would be sufficient to prevent aircrew over-reactions, though. The new reduced vertical separation minima (RVSM) I mentioned before increases the possibility of incursion if a plane suddenly climbs or dives to avoid space junk that's actually a few hundred km away. Better to alert & educate aircrews than accept this risk, because we could be talking about nearly a thousand people's lives if such an event involved two super-heavies.


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