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  5. NASA Says, Fallen Satellite Debris May Never Be Found

NASA Says, Fallen Satellite Debris May Never Be Found

Cape Canaveral, Florida, Sept 25: The six-ton NASA science satellite named UARS that  crashed to Earth on Saturday may never be found, because nobody knows where the ton of space debris may have landed.NASA said

PTI PTI Updated on: September 25, 2011 20:04 IST
nasa says fallen satellite debris may never be found
nasa says fallen satellite debris may never be found

Cape Canaveral, Florida, Sept 25: The six-ton NASA science satellite named UARS that  crashed to Earth on Saturday may never be found, because nobody knows where the ton of space debris may have landed.


NASA said it believes the debris ended up in the Pacific Ocean, but the precise time of the bus-sized satellite's re-entry and the location of its debris field have not been determined.

The Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite, or UARS, ended 20 years in orbit with a suicidal plunge into the atmosphere sometime between  0853 IST to 1' IST,  NASA said.

The satellite would have been torn apart during the fiery re-entry, but about 26 pieces, the largest of which was estimated to have weighed  150 kg, likely survived the fall, officials said.

As it fell to Earth, UARS passed from the east coast of Africa over the Indian Ocean, then the Pacific Ocean, across northern Canada and the northern Atlantic Ocean to a point over West Africa. Most of the transit was over water, with some flight over northern Canada and West Africa, NASA said.

“Because we don't know where the re-entry point actually was, we don't know where the debris field might be,” said Nicholas Johnson, chief orbital debris scientist at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. “We may never know.”

Stretching 35 feet long and 15 feet in diameter, UARS was among the largest spacecraft to plummet uncontrollably through the atmosphere, although it is a slim cousin to NASA's  68 kg Skylab station, which crashed to Earth in 1979.

Russia's last space station, the 135-tonne (122,000 kilogram) Mir, crashed into the Pacific Ocean in 2001, but it was a guided descent.

NASA now plans for the controlled re-entry of large spacecraft, but it did not when UARS was designed.

With most of the planet covered in water and vast uninhabited deserts and other land directly beneath the satellite's flight path, the chance that someone would be hit by falling debris was 1-in-3,200, NASA said.

“The risk to public safety is very remote,” it said.

UARS was one of about 20,000 pieces of space debris in orbit around Earth. Something the size of UARS falls back into the atmosphere about once a year.

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