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China's Tiangong-1 space lab set to hit Earth

ANI  |  Washington D.C. [USA] 

China's or "Heavenly Palace" is set to re-enter the Earth's atmosphere somewhere between March 31 and April 1, according to the latest update from the on Saturday.

The Chinese Manned Space Engineering Office, however, has placed the date of the re-entry of the 40-foot space lab a little later, between April 1 and April 2. Earlier estimates had put the date as late as April 4.

Scientists have underlined that the danger of being hit by falling debris is tiny, which as low as one in one trillion, as the structure is likely to burn up in the Earth's atmosphere during its re-entry, according to

"There is no need for people to worry about its re-entry into the atmosphere. It won't crash to the Earth fiercely, as in sci-fi movie scenarios, but will look more like a shower of meteors," an article by the Manned Space Engineering Office published in its said.

In September 2011, launched Tiangong-1, as a prototype for Beijing's goal of establishing a permanent

However, it told the last year that the space lab had "ceased functioning" in March 2016, without giving any reasons. In September 2016, successfully launched Tiangong-2 space lab and was put into orbit.

As of Thursday, the space lab is orbiting the Earth at a height of 196.4 kilometres.

The re-entry latitude of the is expected to be within 43 degrees north and 43 degrees south of the equator, covering a stretch roughly from in the to in According to scientists, they are not specific about where the space lab would come down.

"Some parts of the upper atmosphere are thicker than others meaning the craft slows unpredictably and since it travels around the Earth in just 90 minutes even an uncertainty of a two minutes means the craft could fall anywhere along a 1,000 kilometer track," Alan Duffy, a research fellow in the and Supercomputing at in said.

The of the for Radio Astronomy Research in Australia, Markus Dolensky, meanwhile said that witnesses who would see the descent of the could see "series of fireballs" streaking across the sky if there were no clouds present.

In 1979, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) first space station, Skylab fell to Earth during its re-entry to the atmosphere, burning up harmlessly in the process.

The last space lab to fall to Earth was Russia's 135-ton Mir space lab in 2001.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, April 01 2018. 11:38 IST
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