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The Space is Filled With Junk But That's Not What Elon Musk is Telling You

Space debris in Earth's geosynchronous Earth orbit (GEO) and the cloud of objects in low Earth orbit (LEO). | Image for representation

Space debris in Earth's geosynchronous Earth orbit (GEO) and the cloud of objects in low Earth orbit (LEO). | Image for representation

If Galileo were alive today, he would see not the stars and planets that he saw from his telescope but the millions of pieces of space debris and plastic hanging around in space today.

  • Last Updated: January 15, 2021, 09:05 IST
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Rakhi Bose

In the 17th-century, when Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei looked out into the unknown vastness of space using his ingenious telescope, he saw the sun, the moon, planets, and stars. Had the polymath been looking through the telescope in the year 2021, he perhaps would have been disappointed to find not stars and other 'space oddities' so eulogized by mortals but bits of trash and plastic.

A 'drifting island of plastic'

While space enthusiasts sit in their plush homes congratulating themselves over human exploits on Mars and the strong message we are sending to the extraterrestrials who are silently but surely noting everything we do, space is filling up with innumerable pieces of junk. Six thousand tons of it.

Recent estimates by experts and scientific models have found 128 million pieces of space debris aimlessly bobbing around in outer space. These account for only the ones that are 1mm in size or smaller. There are also 34,000 larger pieces that measure over 10 cm.

In fact, some experts such as Ekaterini Kavvada, directorate general of Defence Industry and Space at the European Commission, have called the mass of space junk - specifically in Earth's lower orbit - a 'drifting island of plastic'.

Take that, Galileo.

What do we leave behind in space?

Harsh as it may sound, it is not surprising that humans have managed to pollute not just the known (Earth) but also the unknown (space). After all, cleaning up after ourselves was never a human hallmark.

Elon Musk, Richard Branson and the likes of them don't want us to measure the cost of space exploration in metric tonnes of garbage, but in dollars. That's just the wrong way. In fact, each attempt to understand the universe leaves it just a little bit more polluted.

Small bits of rockets that break off the body when they are launched in space, or scratches of chipped paint from bygone spacecraft, defunct satellites, leftover rocket boosters, remnants from past explosions of man-made objects, all contribute to space debris. A 2018 estimate by NASA put the number of defunct satellites in space at 500,000.

But don't underestimate these drifting vestiges of human curiosity (and vanity). Even a humble 1cm piece of space debris poses the threat to potentially destroy multi-million dollar satellites and cause high-velocity explosions in the sky due to the high speeds they hurtle at.

While space debris has not caused any serious damage to Earth yet, let's not forget that time in 2015 when a rather renegade piece of a defunct Russian satellite traveling at the perilous speed of eight miles per second caused three ISS crew members to take emergency shelter in the Soyuz capsule.

Cut to September 2020 when ISS astronauts had to do an "avoidance maneuver" to get out of the way of a wanton piece of celestial junk. And this was just one of three such incidents that occurred in the last year itself. The ISS, which hovers some 240 km above Earth, orbits at the speed of 17,000 miles per hour. At that speed, even a tiny collision can cause unimaginable damage not only to equipment but also endanger the lives of crew members on board.

Cleaning up the universe

Mounting scientific evidence of the physical dangers of space pollution has increased the impetus on space waste-management and clean-up over the years.

But as far as private and state enterprises at the forefront of space exploration go, much needs to be done.

To be fair to Musk, his aerospace company SpaceX did in 2018 launch a Falcon 9 rocket into space that carried along with supplies for the International Space Station an additional experimental "space sweeper" to clean up space debris. With the test run of the device, known as 'RemoveDEBRIS', scientists hoped that that space would get all cleaned up.

That was the company's 53rd launch into space. In 2020, SpaceX completed 100 launches with a set of Starlink satellites that were sent to space on October 24. One wonders how many 'RemoveDEBRIS' machines (created by U.K.’s University of Surrey Space Center, not SpaceX') it would take to clear up all the debris from all of Musk's satellites alone.

The more satellites are sent into space, the greater the risk of them smashing into each other. And with companies like SpaceX and OneWeb sending up entire constellations of satellites into the already crowded Lower Earth Orbit (LEO), experts fear setting off the Kessler syndrome - a chain reaction that leads to the creation of more space junk due to collisions between existing space junk.

Optimism or carelessness?

Some optimistic scientists hope that the problem of space debris will solve itself as objects in space tend to erode in time due to prolonged exposure to space. But this might be nothing more than wishful thinking.

Take, for instance, the case of a failed Envisat remote sensing satellite that is currently roaming outer space after the European Space Agency lost all contact with it in 2012. The satellite, which is the size of an Earthly bus, is expected to hang around for 150 years before naturally eroding.

With a view to addressing this problem, SpaceX’s president and chief operating officer Gwynne Shotwell proclaimed in an online discussion shared by Time magazine in October 2020 that the company's next-generation Starship programs could help in cleaning up space. But the noble aim remains secondary to the firm's primary goal which is to set up a conventional space route to ferry people and cargo to and from the moon.

In comparison, smaller private players are now coming up with alternatives that would do well to garner more attention. Rocket Lab, for instance, has come up with a system to launch rockets into space without creating space debris. By following a process of de-orbiting the launch stages, the company tries to ensure that no pieces of its rockets are left behind in space.

Humans have come a long way since the time of Galileo when scientists had to risk their lives to find out more about space. Looking at the celestial traffic jam, however, one begs to question if we have indeed made the life of scientists safer. After all, if a piece of space debris hits the ISS, scientists onboard will be the first in danger. If a weather forecasting satellite explodes in the sky, state governments and citizens bearing the costs of such enterprises will be the first to flay scientists for the failure.

Before cheering the launch of the millionth rocket to quench our thirst for space exploration, let us not forget Galileo and the many stars and planets he saw from his telescope back in the 17th century - a sight that arguably played a significant role in understanding and demystifying space.

By filling up space with garbage, we have made life a lot duller for the observational astronomers like Galileo of our times who when looking up at the night sky in wonderment in search of distant galaxies today will only find constellations of dead rockets and plastic pride.


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