Talk:Space debris/Archive 2

Monitoring Space Debris. How advanced are things?
This paper suggests that out of the estimated 150,000 objects in orbit around earth, NASA is only able to track about 15,000 of them at an accuracy of over 10m. It also says "This appears to present a very significant challenge. However with appropriate technology extensions, laser ranging can meet this requirement." So it appears if they can monitor all of that if the appropriate equipment. I am going ask some questions over on another wikipedia discussion board to see where this is at today.

Does anyone here know what the current stats are and if they actually monitor space all the time. Can they detect anything that would suddenly occur. Say debris splitting into 2 parts? Thanks. (Simonapro 19:51, 29 July 2006 (UTC))

Currently, approximately 13,000 objects are constantly monitored by the US Space Surveillance System. Out of these, only orbit data for about 9,800 of these objects is publicly available. The smallest objects in the catalogue are about 6 cm in diameter, tracked by the Cobra Dane Phased Array on Shemya Island. The lower threshold of the catalogue depends on the object orbits and their effective radar cross sections. Therefore, in GEO, the minimum size for catalogue objects is about 1 m. The latest space debris environment models (i.e. MASTER-2005 by the European Space Agency) predict that slightly more than 600,000 objects larger than 1 cm, and 150 Million Objects larger than 1 mm are currently orbiting the earth. Only sporadic observations of objects below the catalogue threshold are possible. They are used to validate models of the space debris environment like MASTER. Your second question: Yes, such events have been observed. Due to the catalogue threshold this has only been possible for objects large enough. Mikeo 09:25, 30 July 2006 (UTC)

That is great. Thanks for that update. I guess one question on a lot of people's minds is if this kind of monitoring can actually detect UFOs? Would the current operational monitoring actually detect a UFO entering the atmosphere if such a craft did come from outer space or is the setup more geared towards checking space 'now and again' to see if the projected movements of the debris are as expected? Thanks again (Simonapro 09:49, 30 July 2006 (UTC))


 * That would all depend on whether or not a UFO was in the field-of-view of the sensor. A lot of debris is only tracked when it gets close to active spacecraft.  The US Space Surveillance Network is heavily tasked, and thus updates to all the trackable debris is not something that can be done on a continuous basis.  Another thing to consider is the types of tracking (or more correctly, detection in your question of UFOs) sensors.  Radar, such as Cobra Dane can track small objects with reasonable range data, but relatively poor positional data when compared to optical sensors.  Optical sensors have excellent positional (Az/El) data, but no range data (except via triangulation).

what is the three types of space junk?jm anthony(ucc)

Size of debris
Currently, the article includes the sentance "Most of those unusual objects have re-entered the atmosphere of the Earth within weeks due to the orbits where they were released and their small sizes .". (Emphisis added; line unreferenced) This goes against everything I know of physics. Size should have no impact on orbital behavior, other than smaller sizes decrease drag against what little atmosphere is up at its altitude. Am I missing something, or can I just remove this item? Porkrind 03:06, 4 February 2007 (UTC)


 * Doesn't sound right to me either. Removing. -Loren 05:56, 4 February 2007 (UTC)


 * Too bad! it was right, let me explain : atmospheric drag is proportionnal to the size and decelerates the mass of the object. Thus, the effect of atmospheric drag is proportionnal to the surface/volume ratio, i.e. considering two objects of same shape and density, but of different sizes, the smaller will decelerate faster than the bigger. Is that clear ? Duckysmokton 15:47, 5 February 2007 (UTC)


 * If I understand you correctly you're saying that the acceleration on an object due to drag is given by
 * $$a = - \frac{0.5 \rho_{atm} v^2 A C_d}{\rho V} $$
 * So if we assume that A is proportional to $$r^2$$ and V is proportional to $$r^3$$, then we get:
 * $$a = - \frac{0.5 \rho_{atm} v^2 C_d}{\rho r} $$
 * Where $$\rho_{atm}$$ is the atmospheric density and $$\rho$$ is the density of the object. Correct? -Loren 01:31, 6 February 2007 (UTC)


 * Exactly, I didn't know the formula that you show, but the idea is here : A/V is porportionnal to 1/r, then object size have an effect on the almost-orbital behaviour (almost since inside the exosphere, objects don't orbit forever). Thanx for the revert, perhaps adding a to explain that point would avoid later misunderstanding ? Duckysmokton 12:21, 6 February 2007 (UTC)


 * Sounds good, thanks for bringing this up. Guess I should have thought a bit more carefully before changing things, my physical intuition must be going out of whack. -Loren 15:54, 6 February 2007 (UTC)


 * At least its gotten worked out. I had no idea. Porkrind 03:39, 8 February 2007 (UTC)


 * To be totally anal about it it's actually ballistic coefficient that's important.WolfKeeper 03:51, 8 February 2007 (UTC)


 * Well, to be even more anal, it's basically the old relationship between inertia and an external force, good 'ol Newton's second law.-Loren 04:06, 8 February 2007 (UTC)


 * It is not Ballistic Coefficient, which measures something similar to Coefficient of Drag, it is the actual drag on the object. BC and Cd are variables that are applied to an object but do not account for size of the object by themselves. Size is much more important in a rarified area such as where things orbit the earth, Cd and BC start to become irrevelant. Reginhild 18:38, 18 May 2007 (UTC)

...objects in orbit around Earth created by humans that no longer serve any useful purpose...

I can think of lots of humans that no longer serve any useful purpose!

I have no idea what your maths equations mean, but spelling, grammar and punctuation are pretty important too. When I logged in, my intention was to suggest alternative wording for the introductory paragraph but now I'm too cowed by science to try.

Seavy carr 20:00, 7 May 2007 (UTC)

Why should not write about space debris in fiction?
For example, there is a whole article about Space Shuttle in fiction. Such information, whether useful or not, surely adds some fun. Becides, how do you know if it is useful for others or not? 217.77.54.52 (talk) 08:23, 12 February 2009 (UTC)


 * See Trivia sections. The only criteria for inclusion is whether the information is encyclopedic. Fun is irrelevant. -Loren (talk) 22:02, 13 February 2009 (UTC)

P.S. "Fun is irrelevant"? That's pain in the neck :-) 78.37.47.108 (talk) 07:04, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
 * Fine thanks! I just have read these recommendations about trivia, and the first phrase there is "Trivia sections should not simply be removed from articles in all cases"!

Kosmos or Cosmos?
In a paragraph that mentioned Kosmos-1275, the term "Cosmos" is also used. Should they all be the same, or are Kosmos and Cosmos distinct things? Matthew C. Clarke 07:55, 26 September 2009 (UTC)

Micrometeoroid or micrometeorite
I note that the second paragraph of the lede spells it "micrometeorite" as of today (Oct 2009). However, I believe "micrometeoroid" is correct. But before ruffling any feathers if, perhaps, the "...ite" term has become common vernacular terminology for outer space (extraterrestrial) usage, thought I should bring it up here first. What do others think? Cheers, N2e (talk) 21:32, 15 October 2009 (UTC)
 * Standard definitions:
 * micrometeorite--an extraterrestrial particle, less than a millimeter in size, that has survived entry into the atmosphere without melting.
 * micrometeoroid--(astronomy),(geology) an extraterrestrial particle less than a millimeter in size.

Micrometeoroids are NOT Space Debris
The section on micrometeoroids should be moved to a different article. According to the definition (all man-made objects that...) they are not space debris. Some parts in the section (dealing with protection) may, however, be of interest here. Agree? --Mikeo (talk) 19:17, 3 December 2009 (UTC)


 * Yes I agree. Most of that material would work just as well in Micrometeoroid (Note: this article apparently was since moved from Micrometeorite -- see the last post. JustinTime55 (talk)). The section on asteroids is not particularly relevant either. It's good material; just somewhat off topic.&mdash;RJH (talk) 23:30, 15 December 2009 (UTC)


 * Absolutely; the article seems to have strayed from its topic as defined in the intro; by definition "defunct objects" are human-made and therefore exclude natural meteroids. I'm going to tag it for now; hopefully this will stimulate more discussion and a consensus to move. JustinTime55 (talk) 16:40, 28 October 2014 (UTC)

I disagree. I don't think the problem is that micrometeroids are included, I think the problem is that space debris has been mis-defined. On this NASA page about "Micrometeroids and Orbit Debris" they define both "man-made debris and naturally occurring micrometeoroids" as "space junk" which redirects here. So I think that maybe "space debris" could be defined as both those kinds of things. Of course why "orbit debris" - which is ostensibly "man-made debris" - and "space debris" would have different definitions isn't clear. Volcycle (talk) 03:13, 6 April 2018 (UTC)

Any data on distribution of number vs mass?
It seems clear that the massive objects are the most problematic in that they have the most potential to feed an exponential runaway of collisions. Therefore, in considering active mitigations, it might be useful to have plots of the distribution of number of objects vs mass, both total and for the subset of massive objects passing thought the critical region between ~500 km and ~2000 km. Of course eliminating junk over, say, 100 kg, does not diminish the hazard of 1 kg objects colliding with 50 kg objects, which is still serious because of the large number of smaller objects, but it might limit the magnitude of a potential catastrophic runaway before the situation becomes completely hopeless. Has anyone studied the energetics of the traveling salesman problem for an ion drive tug to go around in LEO and collect the larger objects? I expect this is not a promising approach, yet anything we can do now to ameliorate the problem, even partially, could pay large dividends later on. Wwheaton (talk) 21:08, 6 December 2009 (UTC)


 * There have been studies for ion-drive tugs bringing objects from GEO to a graveyard orbit above GEO (performed i.e. for ESA). There were also some studies about the issue of bringing larger objects from higher LEO (above 900 km) to graveyard orbits some hundred kilometers above (I've seen those ideas presented on a conference - I don't know which.). Basically you have to avoid any significant cross-plane maneuver to save fuel, and try to re-orbit objects in similar orbits. However, as of today, there would be noone paying for such an effort. Threre is no business case - at the moment - to do that. To your first question: Hugh Lewis of University of Southampton is dealing with the question which objects' removal would have the biggest effect on the future development of the debris environment. There have been several publications made by him. Mikeo (talk) 20:32, 7 December 2009 (UTC)

Lunar dust
The following paragraph was noted for being out of context with the remainder of the section, and I have to agree.


 * In the 1960s a new concern surfaced. In 1957 Hans Pettersson conducted one of the first direct measurements of the fall of space dust on the Earth, estimating it to be 14,300,000 tons per year. If this were true, then the Moon would be covered to a very great depth as there are limited forms of erosion to remove this material. In 1961 Arthur C. Clarke popularized this possibility in his novel A Fall of Moondust. This was cause for some concern among the groups attempting to land on the Moon, so a series of new studies followed to better characterize the issue. This included the launch of several spacecraft designed to directly measure the micrometeorite flux (Pegasus satellite program) or directly measure the dust on the surface of the Moon (Surveyor Program). These showed that the flux was much lower than earlier estimates, around 10,000 to 20,000 tons per year, and that the surface of the Moon is relatively rocky.

I was bold and removed it from the article. Where do you think it should be placed? Thanks.&mdash;RJH (talk) 23:28, 14 December 2009 (UTC)


 * I copied this paragraph to the Micrometeoroid article.&mdash;RJH (talk) 23:50, 15 December 2009 (UTC)

Ummm, Pegasus was specifically built to measure the threat to Apollo spacecraft from meteors. I think that's extremely on-topic in the context of the historical development. I'm re-adding a different version that should make this more clear. Maury Markowitz (talk) 12:35, 2 September 2010 (UTC)

Catcher's Mitt
Just a heads up, I have started and article about Catcher's Mitt, DARPA's recently announced debris mitigation study. -SidewinderX (talk) 21:17, 15 December 2009 (UTC)

Transhab
I have moved this section here from the original article:


 * Later designs for protection from small space debris and micrometeroids included the multi-layer inflatable shell of NASA's TransHab space habitation module. This soft ballistic shield technology was subsequently licensed by Bigelow Aerospace, which is pursuing extensions to this technology for a private space station design &mdash;having launched two inflatable-technology, non-habitable spacecraft, Genesis I in 2006 and Genesis II in 2007. , both spacecraft were still operating nominally after more than 10,000 orbits and traveling over 270 million miles each.

Transhab uses a multi-shell design, but not for the reasons suggested in this paragraph. The idea is that each layer supports only part of the load of the one within it, so no one layer has to support the entire load. This means that each individual layer can be thin, and thus retain its flexibility. This, in turn, makes it easy to inflate. In contrast, if the inflatable structure is made out of a single layer of material with the same physical strength as the multiple layers combined, then the resulting structure would be quite stiff and difficult to inflate. It is true that this structure also offers additional safety in terms of puncture, but that is not the design criterion.

I think the text can be savaged, however. If it is, it needs to be in the proper section. It was placed in the history area, and should be located much further down in the article, where designs are being considered.

Maury Markowitz (talk) 19:45, 31 August 2010 (UTC)


 * After reading it a few times, I definitely think this should go back in. The question is where... the history section is definitely not appropriate, but at the same time, none of the sections below seem exactly tailored to it. BTW there was considerable work on this for the various space colony efforts in the 70's we should track down too. Maury Markowitz (talk) 12:30, 2 September 2010 (UTC)

New category for derelict manmade objects orbiting Earth
A new article category has been created, Category:Derelict satellites orbiting Earth. Please add the category tag to any Wikipedia articles on derelict satellites, spacecraft and spent upper stages that are orbiting Earth, as you run into such articles from time to time.

The category was created in February 2011 as a result of a discussion on WikiProject Spaceflight; discussion is here.

The idea was to create a category that would include derelict satellites that are still in orbit, and thus a challenge or potential problem for other Earth-orbiting satellites, as they use up some of the common resource space "real estate" and thus create externalities for others who are attempting to utilize space, especially near-Earth orbital space. Of course, some of those negative externalities are the various problems discussed here in the Space debris article.

If anyone has a systematic way of locating articles on these Earth-orbiting derelicts, please have at getting them categorized appropriately. Cheers. N2e (talk) 22:33, 13 February 2011 (UTC)

Speed of debris in relation to other debris and new missions.
I am not sure, but I believe all rockets launch in the same direction as the earth is orbiting. If that is the case, is not all the debris traveling at roughly the same speed and direction? - The same speed and direction as all satellites and spacecraft? The article does not help me gain an idea of the speed debris will be travelling at relative to its victim, when it impacts operational space craft and satellites, and why does that speed difference exist.??? It's something I have always wanted to know, but nobody ever mentions it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 77.103.10.148 (talk) 15:09, 23 February 2011 (UTC)

No, this is not true. Although most debris orbits in the same direction as the earth (it takes less energy to launch them that way) the orbital inclinations vary quite widely. It is easy to put something into a 28 deg inclination orbit from Cape Canaveral, or a polar orbit from Vandenberg, but other orbit inclinations are obtainable by a plane change after launch. The bottom line is that debris is going in nearly all directions and speeds.

Even if all the debris were going at the same speed in a 28 deg inclination orbit, collisions would occur at high relative velocities because a satellite might be crossing the equator going north while the debris might be crossing the equator going south. It all has to do with the orbital planes, which would still vary with the time of the launch.Rocket Laser Man (talk) 19:58, 24 May 2011 (UTC)

Laser Broom
Reference 119, which itself is not well-written, has been misinterpreted, and there is a confusion between laser ablation and photon momentum.

The formation of a "working mass" to slow down space debris is misleading if not totally wrong. The laser ablation technique slows down the debris by using Newton's Third Law of Motion of equal and opposite reaction. As the gas ablates off the debris, it shoots off ahead of the debris, causing a recoil on the debris itself, slowing it down. This also is misleading, because the debris will actually spiral down, speeding up in velocity. However, this may get too complicated for this type of article.

The photon pressure technique reviewed in reference 119 is a desperation attempt. If you can't get enough laser power on the debris to evaporate any material, then you still might push it with photon momentum. The trouble is, photon momentun is terribly small, and it would take powerful lasers operating for long periods of time. This is not practical for many reasons. The debris moves at 6000 meters per second, and doesn't stay in range very long. Secondly, you can't go shooting powerful lasers through the sky in big arcs because there are other satellites and airplanes to worry about.

The paragraph as written here, makes none of this clear and the result is to mislead the reader into thinking that such an approach has promise. A delta v of 1 mm/sec is less than the uncertainty in atmospheric drag due to changing solar activity.

It seems that the photon momentum approach should be clearly distinguished from the laser ablation approach. The delta V quoted seems to apply to the laser ablation approach which is incorrect: it actually is intended to apply to the photon momentum approach. For example is a Lawrence Livermore Report that talks of laser ablation delta v thousands of times larger than the 1 mm/sec quoted for the photon momentum technique. Clean up of this paragraph seems desirable. Rocket Laser Man (talk) 19:48, 24 May 2011 (UTC)

Post-FAC Review
Following the FAC, I was asked to generate a list of issues that I thought would need to be addressed in order to pass FAC. In the interest of article improvement, I've listed them below. Certainly not everybody will agree with my perspective, but please try not to take these remarks personally; I'm just trying to be objective.

 Post-FAC article review by RJH I used simple dashes for everything.
 * Per MOS:DASH, the article needs to be consistently using either a spaced en-dash or an unspaced em-dash in sentences. Currently it is using a curious mixture of dashes and spacing arrangements.
 * "...orbit as a result - not just the satellites..."
 * "...to a worrying possibility – instead of the density..."
 * "...into their launch vehicle—robotic capture, navigation..."
 * "...substantial additional fuel—to be able..."
 * "...number from 8,500 to 13,000 - compare pg. 6..."


 * Likewise, the page ranges should use an unspaced en-dash.
 * "pp. 340 - 341"

Done.


 * Units should be written consistency. The article lists: "0.04 inches (1.0 mm) per second", "650 feet (200 m)" and "24”x24”x12”". See WP:UNITS.

Done.


 * There are many statements where WP:DATED applies. Examples:
 * "is currently within five years"
 * "Recently the University of Madrid..."
 * "The ISO is also in the process..."

All done.


 * The content contains many unnecessary additive terms, such as 'also' and 'another'. These should be purged.

Done.


 * For references such as "Kessler 1971", I would normally recommend using the sfn template. However, since you are not using the standard citation templates, this won't work unless you use the equivalent HTML coding.
 * Some of the wording is highly emotive, which makes it read as PoV-ish. For example: "feared", "China suffered" , "Particularly worrying", and "leads to a worrying possibility". WP:NPOV may apply here.

Done and done.

History

 * Micrometeorites
 * "This early work, in collaboration with Fletcher Watson, led the Harvard Observatory to build a station observatory...": The statement about collaboration with Fletcher Watson appears ambiguous. Is he collaborating with Helmut Landsberg, Fred Whipple, both, or with the Harvard Observatory? Or is he doing similar work?

Fixed.


 * Kessler's asteroid study
 * Regarding the use of the "Kessler 1971" reference, I looked through the paper and it doesn't appear to say anything to the effect that "transiting the asteroid belt would not be particularly risky". Instead, it says how much shielding would be needed for specific risk levels. Hence, I don't think that reference is being used appropriately. Perhaps there is a later Kessler reference that would work?

I am waiting Don's email. In the meantime I have re-writted this section.


 * Follow-up studies
 * "Similar studies continue to this day." Cite please.

They are all through the article. Instead of providing a list, I re-wrote this.


 * "To everyone's surprise...": Everybody? Or just the investigators?

Removed.


 * A new Kessler Syndrome
 * This section begins with "During the same period". This is vague because the previous section discusses measurements made until the present day. It would be better to give a specific year.
 * "...lower than their rate of decay...": The meaning of this statement is unclear. Is the intent to convey '...lower than their rate of orbital decay...'? Likewise for "...greater than decay rates...".
 * "...where additional debris can quickly upset the system...": What 'system' is becoming "upset"? Does it mean 'upset the equilibrium'? The word 'upset' seems too anthropomorphic.
 * "...that quickly reduces...": 'quickly' appears to be unnecessary vagueness.

All fixed.


 * Debris growth
 * "...by moving the boosters away from their payload...": In the design or after reaching orbit?
 * "The population growth has...": I know that new spacecraft are being launched, but isn't this describing the increasing estimate of the number objects remaining in orbit? I.e. is the increase because of more objects being launched or better tracking? The above wording implies the former.
 * "...debate within the community...": What community?
 * "Others have pointed out...": see WP:WEASEL.
 * "...the environment would continue to contain the then-known population until about 2055, at which point it would increase on its own." This doesn't quite make sense. Why would the equilibrium change in 2055?
 * "...begin some time around 2015..." 'some time' seems redundantly redundant with 'around'.

All fixed.

Characterization

 * Large vs. small
 * "In terms of numbers,": The article is already discussing numbers. I assume this means 'quantities'. Why not simply: "The vast quantity of debris consists of smaller objects,..."?
 * "...the vast bulk..." uses 'bulk' ambiguously. It can mean size, mass, or quantity.
 * "...estimates that debris items smaller ... probably exceeds". The text has already said this is a guess, so either 'estimates' or 'probably' is redundant.
 * "...much lower..." and "...as a considerable proportion..." are vague.

All fixed.


 * "As debris mass tends to be dominated by larger objects, most of which have long ago been detected, the total mass has remained relatively constant in spite of the addition of many smaller objects.": This would only be true if no new launches were made.

No, only if new launches were not offset by new decays. Because of the debris mitigation techniques mentioned further down in the article, decay rates compared to launch rates have changed.


 * "Using the older figure of 8,500 known debris items, the total mass is estimated at 5,500 tonnes." The dating on this estimate is completely uncertain.

I disagree, as it is mentioned earlier, but I have changed this anyway.


 * Debris in LEO
 * "Any impact between two objects of sizeable mass spalls off shrapnel debris from the force of collision" is a sentence fragment. I'd suggest 'can spall off' or 'always spalls off', although I think the first is more accurate.

Hmmm, ok.


 * Debris at higher altitudes
 * "Olympus was hit by a meteor..." 'Olympus' is redlinked, so this statement is unclear. Perhaps "The EAS telecommunications satellite Olympus was hit by a meteor..."

Fixed.

Sources of debris

 * Dead spacecraft
 * The first paragraph, while interesting, seems like trivia. Is there anything that will tie this into the remainder of the section?

Removed, although I prefer introductory leads in any long sections.


 * "As radar returns fall off with the fourth power of distance, in order to obtain useful returns the satellites were powered with a BES-5 nuclear reactor in order to provide enough energy to the broadcaster.": I think the statement about the radar return is not needed here, and is straying off topic. To be pertinent, all it needs to convey is that the spacecraft were powered by BES-5 nuclear reactors.
 * The last sentence needs to be tied into the topic, or else it is trivia. It is also redundant with some content in the "Threat to unmanned spacecraft" section.
 * Boosters
 * The last sentence of the second paragraph (CBERS-1/SACI-1) belongs with the examples in the third paragraph.
 * "...countries did not follow suit for some time." is vague and needs a citation.
 * "...A third break-up event also occurred...": the 'also' is unnecessary here; it already states that this is the third event.

All fixed.


 * Debris from and as a weapon
 * "...largest single space debris incident...": Largest in terms of mass or of quantity?
 * "...most densely populated part of space...": I'd clarify that 'population' here specifically refers to satellites. Also, some use of the word 'orbit' might be better than 'space'.
 * "...and they had decayed by early 2008.": The missile was launched in early 2008, so this doesn't tell the reader much. Also, debris is singular, so it should be 'this' rather than 'they'.
 * "...cause enormous damage to the LEO environment": The environment is a vacuum; I don't think it can be damaged.

All fixed. I disagree with the last point, "the environment" is everything in LEO, including satellites.

Operational aspects

 * Both paragraphs need referencing.

Removed, as above.


 * Threat to unmanned spacecraft
 * "panels tend not to produce new debris as much as a cloud of gas-sized particles that does not present as much of a risk to other spacecraft" This doesn't quite make sense. Does it mean: "panels tend to produce a cloud of gas-sized particles that, compared to debris, does not present as much of a risk to other spacecraft"?
 * "In a Kessler Syndrome cascade..." This paragraph is not cited.

Fixed and Fixed.


 * Threat to manned spacecraft
 * The discussion of the risk to the shuttle in this section seems to need a reorganization. It doesn't flow very naturally and seems to meander back and forth. Please take a look at how this could be improved. Also, since STS-135 was the final shuttle mission, the tense of the section should reflect this.
 * "At one point these..." needs a year.
 * "The damage due to smaller debris has now grown to become a significant threat in its own right." Does this mean the 'rate' of damage? Or has the damage itself somehow become more dangerous?
 * "Chipping of the windows became common..." needs a date.

Minor stuff fixed, but I don't see the problem with the flow. Suggestions?


 * Hazard on Earth
 * This section just lists a series of examples of stuff falling harmlessly to the ground, which conflicts with the section title. I think it needs some reworking, reorganization and/or a better focus on the risk factors.
 * "The Columbia disaster in 2003 demonstrated this risk," The risk was mentioned three paragraphs earlier, with two harmless impacts placed in between.

So and so? I really don't see either of these as problems.

Tracking and measurement

 * Tracking from the ground
 * "Radar and optical detectors such as lasers..." A laser is not a detector.
 * "NASA Orbital Debris Observatory..." This sentence seems like a trivia note. Can it be placed in context? What is the benefit of the liquid mirror?
 * "...maintains a catalogue containing..." Past tense, 'that contained'.
 * "Nevertheless, the majority of debris objects remain unobserved." If you can't observe them, then how do you know? Is this based upon debris models?

Fixed and fixed.


 * Measurement in space
 * "...Mir Environmental Effects Payload which studied the enviornment in the Mir area" I don't think that payloads study anything; 'measured' perhaps. Also 'enviornment' => 'environment'.
 * "...debris hardware is also a valuable source..." Unnecessary 'also'.
 * "The close examination of its surfaces allowed the analysis of the directional distribution and the composition of debris flux." The use of 'the' articles seems odd here. Perhaps:
 * "Close examination of its surfaces allowed an analysis of the directional distribution and composition of the debris flux."
 * "...could provide additional insight." Is this being planned? If so, when and by whom?
 * "...to provide another means for validating...": an unnecessary 'another'.
 * "...Mir were also extensively studied...": an unnecessary 'also'.

All fixed.


 * Gabbard diagrams
 * "The distribution of the resulting diagram..." It's nit-picking, but I think it should say it is the plotted data that have the distributions, rather than the diagram.

Ok.

Dealing with debris

 * Doesn't this paragraph belong in the 'Debris growth' section?

Fixed, I don't know who added this.

unclear given the varied use of 'regime' elsewhere in the article.
 * Growth mitigation
 * I think the sentence "The previously mentioned change ... debris characterization essentially eliminated..." needs a re-write. The word 'characterization' is too... well, bureaucratic, and the sentence contains ambiguities. For example:
 * "The modification of the Delta boosters, at a time when the debris problem was first becoming apparent, essentially eliminated their further contribution to the orbiting debris."
 * "...launch license regime to Earth orbits." Please clarify what 'regime' means in this context. A rule perhaps? If so, why not say rule? This seems especially
 * "The ISO is also in the process" needs a date and uses an unnecessary additive term 'also'.

All fixed.


 * Self-removal
 * "It is already an ITU..." => "It is an ITU...".
 * "Another proposed solution..." additive => "A spacecraft can be launched with an electrodynamic tether attached."
 * "At the end of their lifetime..." ==> "At the end of its lifetime...".

Fixed.

* "...cannot be removed under its own power" makes no sense.
 * External removal

It should now.


 * "large spacecraft capture and hazard mitigation" is ambiguous. Does it mean "capture and hazard mitigation of large spacecraft" or "capture and hazard mitigation using large spacecraft"?
 * The first use of "laser brooms" is unlinked. It also remains unexplained until the third paragraph. Is this sentence even needed? Or is it redundant?
 * Does "SIS vehicle includes the vehicle capability" need to use "vehicle" twice?
 * "Another potential solution is the laser broom, which uses...": additive term => "The laser broom is a potential solution that uses..."
 * "Recent NASA research (2011)" is awkward. It uses a dated term then gives the actual date in parentheses. How about "NASA research in 2011"?
 * "Another well-studied solution...": additive => "A well-studied solution..."
 * "US Air Force worked on a ground-based design" When? It should state in the first sentence that this design was for a "laser-broom".
 * I think "New approaches involving multi-use, ... regime to Earth orbits" needs to be re-written. It sounds like an advertisement and uses unclear jargon. It also appears to repeat part of the third paragraph of the "Growth mitigation" section.
 * The math notation ">2 kg" should be written out => "more than 2 kg".
 * "...announced that it has won..." has => had.
 * "New upper stage rockets are being designed..." by whom?

I believe all of these are fixed.


 * References
 * The FAC folks are fairly fastidious about wanting the citations to have a consistent appearance. This means all author names should be listed in the same form and with the same punctuation. Unfortunately, there is a lot of variance here that needs to be stamped out.
 * Please include doi and/or bibcode links for the journal articles. For example: The Collision Probability of Geostationary Satellites.
 * What is the "Orbital debris" reference?

Done, except the doi. I'm not sure about that last one, is it still a problem?

Okay, that's it for now. Regards, RJH (talk) 21:16, 13 July 2011 (UTC)


 * That is a very helpful review of the article RJHall; your specifics on what needs improved will be very helpful to any editor who wants to comprehensively work at improving Wikipedia coverage of this topic. Cheers;.  N2e (talk) 22:32, 13 July 2011 (UTC)
 * Thank you, I was glad to help. Good luck with the article and I hope you bring it back for another FAC cycle. Regards, RJH (talk) 14:40, 14 July 2011 (UTC)

All changes implemented with the exception of the formatting of refs. Is there a tool for this? Maury Markowitz (talk) 16:18, 14 July 2011 (UTC)
 * I'm not aware of one, but it would certainly be helpful. All I can suggest is trying the various Citation templates. Some people don't like to use those, but I find them to be very helpful in maintaining citation consistency. For organizing citations, you might also look at WP:LDR and . Thanks. Regards, RJH (talk) 16:27, 16 July 2011 (UTC)

Mmm, sorry but I don't agree that these have all been addressed. In addition, Regards, RJH (talk) 19:37, 19 July 2011 (UTC)
 * The Whipple (2000) citation does not verify that, "some variety of the Whipple shield has been almost universal for decades". It only confirms that it is widely used in 2000.
 * The sentence that begins "Similar studies were applied to Jupiter's moons..." is off topic and leads to some ambiguity at the start of the next paragraph. I think it can be removed without harming the article.
 * Something is messed up with the sentence that begins, "firing a laser beam at a piece of space junk". It looks like it has a space indent. -- fixed
 * I think you can link the citations to the bibliography as per the following example:
 * In the reference:
 * In the bibliography:
 * 
 * Donald Kessler (Kessler 1971), ...
 * 
 * Donald Kessler (Kessler 1971), ...
 * 
 * 

I have addressed these additional points, except the linking which I will not do, and moved/reformatted N2E's additions. Maury Markowitz (talk) 02:55, 21 July 2011 (UTC)

The missing sentence
User:Maury_Markowitz reverted this contribution from another editor without any explanation. I reverted it with the comment: "why remove the sentence? It's in the BBC's article.". He revert it again with the comment: "Re-removing sentence - that the author in question thinks his idea is great doesn't make it great, and especially worth quoting POV just because he stated it" and for reason better clear to himself, decided to write me on my talk page instead here. As I explained User:Maury_Markowitz, the sentence is actually not from the author of the proposal, but from a third party.

Now I do think that the sentence is important firstly because the feasibility in technology and costs is in my opinion a fundamental subject and secondly because introduce the political and strategic issue that I think has not been treated in the article. If someone feels that the text of the sentence is too close to the one from BBC, please feel free to modify it. --Dia^ (talk) 18:22, 23 August 2011 (UTC)


 * Note that Dia added the statement again, complete with broken reference, in spite of no consensus being reached on this issue. I'll re-state my concern: the quote in question makes POV claims about the validity of a paper project. The quote was clearly taken from the first "space person" the BBC could find, in this case a remote-sensing company better known for amateur radio efforts. Why the article needs this POV statement is a mystery to me, which is why I deleted it, re-formatted it, and fixed the reference. As to the "political and strategic issue", that's not part of the quote being discussed. Maury Markowitz (talk) 12:42, 24 August 2011 (UTC)


 * Thanks again! I find you extremely amusing! (and no, is not ironic)


 * To come to your concerns:
 * you said the link is broken - wrong - actually works perfectly fine, I just checked it one more time. You just added the date and title, I don't have anything against it.
 * you feel that the comment from a third party reported by the BBC's journalist is POV because "The quote was clearly taken from the first "space person" the BBC could find". Your statement is clearly NPOV, right? (yes, here I'm ironic) To make such an allegation you need at least a reliable source for it. Just for the sake of it, here some info on the guy and here some more giving the opinion. (I'd say wrong again)
 * You didn't "re-format the statement" -wrong - you just deleted a sentence that I reinstated.
 * You said: "As to the "political and strategic issue", that's not part of the quote being discussed." - wrong - The second part of the sentence you removed reads: "even though the political implications of taking out a functioning satellite could make the plan a non-starter." I agree with you, the subject is just fleeting treated. In the BBC article is a bit more detailed. In my opinion, it should be expanded since is a big issue. If you don't feel that the political implication, or rather the sensitivities of some governments and companies is an important issue, that state why.--Dia^ (talk) 13:33, 24 August 2011 (UTC)
 * Please allow me to make an observation regarding the aforementioned edit. To me, the opinion that "The scheme has been commended for being far more practical than the average proposal..." fails WP:WEASEL and is a bit dubious in it's use of the word "average". It would be better to list the actual quote with the source. For example: Italian Space Agency researcher Marco Castronuovo says that, "People have come up with all sorts of daft ideas... that are really science fiction at the moment. Something like this is a lot more practical." Regards, RJH (talk) 14:47, 24 August 2011 (UTC)


 * I don't have anything against to quote or even change the wording, only the sentence should read "Mr Stuart Eves said that people have come up with all sorts of daft ideas... that are really science fiction at the moment. Something like this is a lot more practical." For ease of use, here the cited BBC's article. I still think that the important bit is the following sentence, this from Mr. Castronuovo: "This kind of approach could be seen as a threat to operative systems; if you have the power to go to an object in space and pull it down, nothing prevents you from going to an operative satellite and pulling it down, so it's really a delicate matter." At the moment the two paragraphs are summed up in a short one on this article. --Dia^ (talk) 16:51, 24 August 2011 (UTC)

When the removal of a single weasel quote generates this much hostility, I think it's safe to say it should go. I'm going to modify the section and fix the reference. If the quote is added again I will remove it and invite you to start a formal process before adding it again. Maury Markowitz (talk) 13:39, 3 September 2011 (UTC)

Actually, I just summarized all the non-mainstream solutions into a single statement. Maury Markowitz (talk) 13:46, 3 September 2011 (UTC)

Sources to consider for inclusion
found items which have not been incorporated but might help content


 * --User:Ceyockey ( talk to me ) 19:17, 19 February 2012 (UTC)
 * --User:Ceyockey ( talk to me ) 19:17, 19 February 2012 (UTC)

Another Speed Question
What's the maximum average speed (well, ignore outliers) of space debris? Any impacts would result in objects traveling slower, correct? Or would a big object making a small piece of shrapnel make the shrapnel travel even faster than the net of the two velocities? Speed and mass are going to (roughly) determine the amount of damage that can be done... It's also implied in a number of articles that small stuff traveling fast turns into plasma upon contact - how fast does that need to be? How much space inbetween layers of shielding are needed to dissipate the energy of the plasma? ~ender 2012-03-27 8:29:AM MST — Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.165.52.42 (talk)

Reference 7 Creation Ex-Nihilo Technical Journal
I do not want to open a can of worms, but... The paper cited in claiming 10 - 20 kilotons per year of meteoric dust is from what appears to be a magazine that is "less than main-stream". The journal is now called the "Journal of Creation" and is most likely a rag with fake peer review by a religiously motivated group. (This is my opinion) Just because they said it, doesn't make it wrong, but I suggest we remove the citation and find a better one. The journal's web site is headlined as being "Creation Ministries International". The April 22, 2012 article "Creation and evolution: teaching two histories",according to the web site "It’s about teaching opposing histories of the world, and (where possible) showing how biblical creation is overall the one that best fits reality." What is wikipedia's policy on technical content? Can any published opinion be used as a source of valid technical content? If so, Wikipedia is doomed.71.31.149.105 (talk) 01:45, 25 April 2012 (UTC)

Excellent new article on space debris legal issues
There is a pretty comprehensive new article on space debris legal issues here: Legal issues surrounding space debris remediation, Michael Listner, The Space Review, 6 August 2012. Could definitely help us beef up the (undercovered) legal and political side of space debris in the article. Cheers. N2e (talk) 17:20, 8 August 2012 (UTC)
 * That is an amazing article. Maury Markowitz (talk) 19:39, 25 April 2014 (UTC)

Recent copyedits
Comments on 's recent edits. As part of these he added a few notes which I hope to address here. This was done by going through the history in reverse order, so issues that were addressed later might still be in this list. And then there's diff itself...
 * "Probably a mistake to name it "micrometeoroid"
 * I believe this is wrong. As I understood it, a meteoroid is the object in space, a meteor is the object as it falls through the atmosphere, and a meteorite is the object if/when it reaches the ground. If this is correct, then the section is correctly named.


 * "design for its never-flown"
 * The TransHab design has flown, as Genesis. TransHab always referred to the design, like "Space Shuttle" vs. Atlantis.


 * "seems to be merely a method"
 * The issue here appears to be the use of the term "particularly effective"? To put some numbers to this, 11 of the 70 identified pieces of space junk hitting the ground were from Deltas. However, looking for a ref on this (I had one) I find instead a whole lot of scholarly articles copying this article! In any event, Deltas were a problem and were addressed. Perhaps removing "particularly" would fix the concern here?


 * "A new battery of studies followed "
 * Is the when not explained enough in the following sentences?


 * "If a collision occurs, resulting fragments over
 * The issue here appears to be definitional - debris are generally classed into above and below 1 kg and/or 10cm. It's not that there won't be 500g debris from a collision, nor that such an object isn't a risk, but in terms of classification those collisions do make significant numbers of objects in the second class. This is as opposed to spalling events, like paint flakes, which don't. This does seem to be covered with reasonable depth in the "large vs. small" area.


 * "=== External removal ==="
 * Personally, I'm in favor of removing any specific plan here and replacing it all with generalized concepts. There have been instances of "pushing my favorite" in this seemingly out-of-the-way article. Unfortunately, to date the concepts have generally been proposed as missions, which makes a clean separation more difficult perhaps. I'm going to spend some time thinking about this.

After those edits the history becomes more difficult to follow, but it seems the only major edit was to move history to the bottom, which I'm not sure I understand (this wasn't N2e's edit). Maury Markowitz (talk) 13:03, 20 February 2015 (UTC)


 * Huh? The recent copyedits on this page were (helpfully) done by User:Miniapolis (maybe 40 edits in the past week or so).  I don't seem to have worked on this article for several months.


 * Don't have time to go through your list right now, but if you have questions about particular old edits in this article, by whatever editor may have made them, I can get back here sometime later. In the meantime, all editors are encouraged to edit away and attempt to improve the article at relevant margins. Cheers.  N2e (talk) 15:33, 20 February 2015 (UTC)

Emerging national and international standards
I saw a couple of papers recently that mention (they are both light on details) that about 20+ nations have now put forth some sort of standards for dealing with space debris that might be under their jurisdiction. E.g., Russian launches are under the legal jurisdiction of Russia, etc. Here they are: Enjoy. N2e (talk) 01:29, 23 June 2015 (UTC)
 * Report of the Legal Subcommittee on its fifty-fourth session, held in Vienna from 13 to 24 April 2015, UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space, April 2015.
 * Compendium of space debris mitigation standards adopted by States and international organizations, including List of countries that have national mechanisms in place as of June 2014, from the UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space, April 2015.

Skylab
I'm old enough to remember when Skylab fell down. Why didn't Skylab become space debris ? Was the predecessor of ISS deliberately brought down ? Boeing720 (talk) 00:37, 10 October 2015 (UTC) And by the way, article tells of space debris already at "altitude" (or distance) of 800 km, I may have calculated wrong here, but I get an Earth gravitation of 8.17 m/s2 at 800 km. If that's correct, shouldn't that gravity be sufficient to bring some litter down ? I presume it also has to do with orbit speed, which is a kind of acceleration, if I remember my physic atleast. Boeing720 (talk) 00:52, 10 October 2015 (UTC)

External links modified
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Planet Labs plans, and the increasing amount of satellite fleet operations
I missed this last year, but apparently Planet Labs publically released their plans and commitment with respect to potential orbital debris from their satellite fleet operations: Keeping Space Clean: Responsible satellite fleet operations, Planet Labs, 16 October 2014.

It seems to mostly just rely on the standard "our stuff will fall out of orbit and re-enter the atmosphere of Earth within the 25 years practice the UN recommends." Still, an interesting read, and perhaps useful for improving the article re how sat fleet operators are thinking in the mid-2010s. Cheers. N2e (talk) 16:04, 29 December 2015 (UTC)


 * October 2016—Review/overview article on the problem
 * The Space Review just published an in-depth overview article on the problem of space debris, and the growing number of large constellation satellites. Driving change. Mega-constellations and mega-debris, Jeff Foust, 10 October 2016.  Would be a good source for updating the article. N2e (talk) 03:53, 11 October 2016 (UTC)

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Recent data
Many thanks for your recent edits to this article. I have no time to contribute right now but you may like to check out my recent updates to the Fengyun-1C incident, where I quote more recent sources for the current state of debris tracking. — JFG talk 14:19, 26 October 2016 (UTC)


 * Thanks JFG, I appreciate that. I sometimes run into something I've read that is too good to pass up making a small edit to try to improve the article in some way or another.  Unfortunately, I too am loaded up with other stuff, and the space debris article seems to always get short shrift.  It really needs a comprehensive copyedit to clean ups something that has become a bit of a hodgepodge with so much added over time in small edits by many editors.


 * Perhaps someday, on rainy Wednesday afternoon ... :)   —N2e (talk) 15:41, 26 October 2016 (UTC)


 * Peter B. de Selding, long time space journalist for Space News, is now producing his Space Intel Report with no paywall. Thus can be a verifiable source.  Here's an overview article on the rather substantive increase in sat placements that are planned for the next several years; massively larger than previous decades. Future Large Constellations.  Much more human-caused in-space objects coming shortly.  Cheers.  N2e (talk) 23:00, 4 May 2017 (UTC)

Reference tags may need review
I spotted an issue with the references. The Schefter note (formerly #44 if you go back in history to | this version) was throwing the error this help explains how to fix. I made a quick and dirty fix to it by renaming one of the refs, but someone that knows the article better may want to carry out a more thorough review. The Schefter article is referenced multiple times (mostly not to any specific page) and some collapsing may be beneficial. ++Lar: t/c 16:08, 16 December 2016 (UTC)

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As of December 2016, five satellite collisions have resulted in generating space waste.
Have five such collisions created space waste or has space waste caused five such collisions? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.132.132.135 (talk) 09:51, 8 August 2018‎ (UTC)
 * Five major collisions or spontaneous satellite explosions have created thousands of debris pieces. I'm not aware of any small debris to have caused anything significant. Toughest thing documented was a dent in an ISS window. — JFG talk 11:01, 8 August 2018 (UTC)

Removal of unsorced and self-described political speculation contrary to fact.
The first major event predicted by the Kessler syndrome "speculatively disproves" the effect? I move for removal of the self-sourced interjection per Wikipedia policy. Can anyone else who understands the math and policy second this? Drakcap (talk) 22:23, 13 October 2018 (UTC)

Suggested redirect
Suggest the creation of a redirect here from the search terms empty trash bag object and ETBO, as some recent media, such as Daily Mail have been reporting on this term being used by astronomers to identify lightweight space debris. 136.159.160.5 (talk) 22:03, 29 January 2019 (UTC)
 * I would say no, at least not for now. Chances are people will stop searching that very soon, and as such would be pretty useless. From what I can tell, if anything it would warrant its own page, as ETBO seems to refer to a specific type of space debris. Integral Python click here to argue with me 22:11, 29 January 2019 (UTC)

Types of Space Debris
Hi

I read from https://www.spaceacademy.net.au/watch/debris/sdfacts.htm that there are major types of space debris which include the following: Natural space debris consists of small pieces of cometary and asteroidal material called meteoroids. Artificial space debris is any non-functional man-made object in space (usually orbiting the Earth).

Thanks

LOBOSKYJOJO (talk) 06:16, 27 February 2019 (UTC)
 * That’s already in the article. Andyjsmith (talk) 00:10, 28 February 2019 (UTC)