Space Junk: Houston, We Have a Problem

Space junk orbiting Earth.
Humans have left an absolute mess in space, but no one wants to clean it up. (Image: via NASA)

When we think of space, we think of big and empty, but when it comes to Earth’s orbit, it’s cluttered with millions of pieces of garbage that we call space junk. The junk — or space debris — is made up of uncontrollable human-made items that remain in orbit long after they’ve served their original purpose.

The scale of debris ranges from the very large, including discarded stages from rocket and satellite launches, through to smaller metal pieces, such as nuts and bolts, all the way down to particles such as paint flakes. At its smallest, the space junk may only be one millimeter in size, but there are thousands of pieces bigger than a pizza box causing problems.

To protect the lives of human astronauts, the International Space Station schedules spacewalks to ensure they avoid space junk in the same orbital path.
To protect the lives of human astronauts, the International Space Station schedules spacewalks to ensure they avoid space junk in the same orbital path. (Image: WikiImages via Pixabay)

According to the latest European Space Agency statistical modeling, there are approximately 34,000 objects greater than 10 cm in orbit, but up to 128 million items between 1 mm and 1 cm floating around. Objects smaller than 10 cm cannot be tracked conventionally.

Satellite systems expert Dr. Joon Wayn Cheong, from the UNSW School of Electrical Engineering and Telecommunications, says that as humans launch more objects into space, this debris may increasingly threaten the safety of satellites and human astronauts, saying: 

“Space junk poses a particular risk for space missions that involve human life. This is particularly important for the International Space Station, since careful consideration needs to be made about the orbital path of space junk before spacewalk exercises are conducted.

“The biggest issue with these objects is that they cannot be tracked or controlled. If we can control them, we can easily ensure they avoid and manoeuver around nearby objects.”

However, when space junk collides with other orbiting satellites, or larger pieces of space junk, it can break into smaller bits of debris — further fuelling the problem. Dr. Cheong added:

“It’s called the Kessler Syndrome. This phenomenon describes the exponential growth of contamination in our orbits, where debris begets more debris, and sadly, there’s not enough money or resources in the world to clean up all the space junk properly.”

Small but mighty space junk

It’s hard to think that objects smaller than the size of a toothpick can cause so much damage, but in space, anything is possible. Dr. Cheong said:

“Space debris can travel up to 10 kilometres per second which has the same impact of being hit by a small cricket ball at 100 kilometres per hour. The exterior of satellites is often covered in solar panels, which consist of brittle glass.

“So regardless of how small the debris it collides with, the satellite will be likely damaged, and therefore more debris is created. These satellites are vulnerable — they’re not designed to be smashed.”

Expensive real estate

Like the property market, orbit real estate is limited and competitive. One of the more important orbits is the geostationary orbit, referred to as the geosynchronous equatorial orbit (GEO), which is located at an altitude of 35,000 km from the Earth’s surface. It is considered one of the most valuable orbits and is occupied by many telecommunication and broadcast satellites. Dr. Cheong said:

“Space junk contaminates the orbits it occupies; it uses up the orbital slot that another functional, more useful satellite could occupy. We’re seeing an increasing trend of space agencies and companies sending many satellites into much higher orbits, primarily the upper Low Earth Orbit (LEO), and in some cases the GEO orbit.

“But they get into a situation where they lose control of these satellites, or they stop functioning completely but still continue to occupy the orbit for 10 to 15 years and there’s no way of retrieving them.”

A computer-generated image representing space debris as it could be seen from high Earth orbit. The two main debris fields are the ring of objects in geosynchronous Earth orbit (GEO) and the cloud of objects in low Earth orbit (LEO). (Image: via NASA Orbital Debris Program Office)

This creates a problem where non-functional satellites end up occupying prime real estate, he says, adding:

“And as time goes by, their position in space becomes more and more precious because there are fewer orbital paths available to send up new satellites for important purposes such as communications, positioning, earth observation and other technologies.”

Space junk afterlife

As Deputy Director at UNSW Australian Centre for Space Engineering (ASCER), Dr. Cheong led the team that built Australia’s first operational CubeSat in space — UNSW-EC0. He says there are more sustainable ways of undertaking experimental space missions — by putting them in lower orbits where they passively re-enter earth within one to two years with near-zero risk of collision. When satellites reach the end of their life.

Space Shuttle Endeavour had a major impact on its radiator during STS-118. The entry hole is about 5.5 mm (0.22 in), and the exit hole is twice as large. (Image: via NASA)

Dr. Cheong says they should either be moved to a graveyard orbit or deorbited back to Earth to reduce the risk of collision with other satellites, adding:

“Graveyard orbits are at a much higher altitude and do not interfere with common operational orbits. For the satellites that are closer to Earth, you can move them to an even lower orbit and let gravity pull them back down to Earth and they decay faster as they move through the gradually thicker atmosphere beneath it.

“For the satellites that are further away, they should be moved to a graveyard orbit. The onus is on the spacecraft operators to ensure they have enough fuel at the end of their mission to make a conscious decision about what to do with the satellite — just don’t dump it and further pollute our orbits.”

Out of sight, out of mind

Dr. Cheong says there should be an international effort to clean up the junk in space:

“One of the problems with space junk is the lack of accountability. It is difficult for these agencies and companies to admit their satellite has failed — which makes collision with debris inescapable. As for tiny undetectable debris, if we don’t know it’s up there, we can’t account for it in future space missions. This increases the chances of future collision.”

Provided by: Cecilia Duong, University of New South Wales [Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.]

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  • Troy Oakes

    Troy was born and raised in Australia and has always wanted to know why and how things work, which led him to his love for science. He is a professional photographer and enjoys taking pictures of Australia's beautiful landscapes. He is also a professional storm chaser where he currently lives in Hervey Bay, Australia.

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