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paul Offline OP
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this morning the crew on board the ISS were occupying emergency escape pods due to defunct space junk.

http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2012/0324/A...at-gets-serious

Quote:
Some 22,000 chunks of space junk zip around the earth. On Saturday, six International Space Station astronauts scrambled for safety as a piece of a Russian satellite whizzed by.


Quote:
The six earthlings – three Russians, two Americans, and a Dutchman – aboard the International Space Station were stirred from their slumber Saturday morning to jump into emergency escape pods, once again drawing into focus the growing dangers of hurtling space junk.

The astronauts, orbiting 200 miles above the planet, were told by ground control to scramble into two docked Soyuz spacecrafts in case a piece of a wrecked Russian satellite should smash into the ISS, which could have heavily damaged the platform as both objects were traveling at orbital speeds – 17,500 miles per hour. The emergency was called off after the chunk passed by at an approximate distance of nine miles – which in space terms is a near-miss.

Everything went by the book and as expected, the small piece of cosmos satellite debris passed the international space station without incident,” said a NASA spokesman.

Ground controllers did not believe the ISS was in extreme danger, but ordered the emergency maneuver after determining that the trajectories could intersect.

NASA says there are about 22,000 pieces of sizable space junk – primarily bits of old satellites – orbiting the earth and has in the past ordered the ISS crew to adjust the craft's path to avoid collisions. In all, NASA tracks nearly half a million pieces of space junk.

The piece that threatened the ISS Saturday morning came from the 2009 collision of the Iridium communications satellite and the Russian Cosmos 2251.


USA X37-B
RUSSIAN MAKS


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-snm5HqR2Uc

seems like the un-manned vehicles could maneuver into position , open up a door and scoop up old defunct satellites and debris and bring them back to earth or take the junk further out and jettison the junk or satellites into our sun.
think about the big bucks that could be had retrieving broken satellites and re-deploying them after repairs have been made


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Unfortunately it really isn't that simple. The orbits of the junk are very much spread out and trying to match them would take an incredible lot of fuel. Just turning an open bay door to the junk would not work very well, because the approach velocity would probably be too high for safety. There have been a number of suggestions of ways to capture it, but so far nobody has come up with anything that will really work. And the problem just keeps getting worse. Every launch creates more junk. Actually the big pieces are probably not the main problem. The main problem is small stuff, things like bolts. They are hard to track, and if they hit with sufficient velocity they could hole a space craft. I seem to remember that more than once they had to replace windows on the Space Shuttle because they had pits from running into things like flakes of paint.

As far as reusing broken satellites. They tried that with one of the earlier satellite launches from the Space Shuttle. It failed immediately after release and they spent a couple of days and several space walks trying to get it going. They never succeeded. Then they did another mission and recovered the satellite. It was repaired and then relaunched, but it wasn't really economical. And that was a satellite that was designed to be recovered by the Shuttle.


Bill Gill


C is not the speed of light in a vacuum.
C is the universal speed limit.
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paul Offline OP
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we were discussing un-manned craft so crew safety is null.
I think that trying to catch up with space junk would require alot of energy , but since the sun shines all the time up there if you want it to then why couldnt it just sit there
in the sun shine charging up batteries waiting for some junk to come along , then speed up to the junks speed and harpoon it or net it , then drag it back into a trash bin.

LOL

ion thrusters use electricity not gasoline and since there arent any gas pumps in space yet , the craft could just use the free energy available from the sun for maneuvering.

things that arent that simple can be made simple using simple thought and imagination.

95,000 ft high toy robot.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZCAnLxRvNNc&feature=related

just think of the possibilities , note the balloon didnt require a billion dollar rocket strapped to it ass.





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Most of the junk is moving way to fast to simply put something in the way it would punch straight thru it.

You need clever engineering to stop that look at the protective shielding on the ISS.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whipple_shielding


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paul Offline OP
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LOL

I was just thinking about the whipple shielding and the little toy robot.

and the net.

I know it should be much cheaper to build and deploy but even though it would cost ((( WAY ))) less and would not be as technical as a large trash collector would cost to build and deploy.

why not use 4 really small craft and a net !

we know where the junk is and the 4 craft dragging the net behind them could just tow the net around the earth scooping up the space junk.

remote controled or even programatically controled via the data we have on the position and velocities of the junk.

if they get hit by a micrometeor and become unuseable then your out a few thousand dollars.


but if a large multibillion dollar craft is damaged that has a crew onboard then that would surely show that the 4 smaller craft would have been much better.


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Originally Posted By: Paul
why not use 4 really small craft and a net !

Paul, the net wouldn't be able to hold the debris when it hit it. It is traveling at much too high a velocity to be stopped by a net. The net would soon be shredded. And there would go the few thousand dollars for the robot, and the millions of dollars for the launch.

Remember that the debris is mostly small stuff and it is not in any standard orbit. It is going around every which way at large relative speeds with respect to any catcher.

Bill Gill


C is not the speed of light in a vacuum.
C is the universal speed limit.
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Originally Posted By: paul
LOL

I was just thinking about the whipple shielding and the little toy robot.

and the net.

I know it should be much cheaper to build and deploy but even though it would cost ((( WAY ))) less and would not be as technical as a large trash collector would cost to build and deploy.

why not use 4 really small craft and a net !

we know where the junk is .........>...?



Originally Posted By: Mike Kremer


Hi Paul
Do we really know where all the bits of small junk are?

ISS have to keep a careful visual and/or Radar look out for the smaller pieces of junk,
and be ready to move the ISStation out of danger, using its Gas jets.

Junk collection using a 'Net technique' might prove difficult.

Does anyone know of a reason why ISS could not be shifted into a few hundred feet higher orbit
....and escape all the junk?
After all... .given a little time....all the junk will descend lower.



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"You will never find a real Human being - Even in a mirror." ....Mike Kremer.


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Originally Posted By: Mike Kremer
Does anyone know of a reason why ISS could not be shifted into a few hundred feet higher orbit
....and escape all the junk?

The main problem is that the junk is a vast cloud that surrounds the Earth from the top of the atmosphere to beyond geosynchronous orbit.

Bill Gill


C is not the speed of light in a vacuum.
C is the universal speed limit.
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paul Offline OP
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Quote:
Paul, the net wouldn't be able to hold the debris when it hit it. It is traveling at much too high a velocity to be stopped by a net.


didnt I say that the 4 craft could travel around the earth scooping up the junk?

Originally Posted By: paul
and the 4 craft dragging the net behind them could just tow the net around the earth scooping up the space junk.


so , if the junk is traveling at 20kph then the 4 craft towing the net would have to be traveling over 20kph to just catch up with the junk.

also I would think that you wouldnt try to catch the junk traveling in the opposite direction or at any significant velocity other than the velocity of the net itself.

but did you know that if the 4 craft overtake the junk as it is traveling at 20kph and the 4 craft are only traveling at
20,001 meters per hour by the time the junk passes into the net the impact from the collision would be minimal and even that impact can be greatly reduced.

just divide 1 meter per hour by 3600 seconds and you will have the impact speed.

2.7e-4
.00027 mps

not much damage there to the junk or the net , I wouldnt think.



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Quote:
Do we really know where all the bits of small junk are?


not all of them , sometimes when there is a collision there are hundreds more objects from the collision.

there are currently millions of debris in space these range from small parts to whole defunct satellites , LOL.

before long we will need to clean up our trash dump in space in order to use space for any purpose.

check it out , Lockheed Martin has thought about it too.

Quote:
We've seen a few concepts for to deal with all this junk, including recycling the dead satellites or capturing them with a giant net, but we are practically blind as to where all this space trash is going. We covered Lockheed Martin's plans to track space junk in the past, but the company just activated its prototype radar system that can monitor our entire sky and track more than 200,000 objects in orbit.


http://www.pcworld.com/article/251582/lo...pace_trash.html

according to the article above there are at least 20,000 known debri objects in orbit , these must be the larger ones , just think the 4 craft could be fitted with junk finding instruments that detect unknown debri and radios its telemetry to earth , that debri could then be scheduled for pick up later.

and the nice thing about using nets is that the 4 craft could take the full nets to a drop off point further out in space and then go to the ISS to get fitted with a new empty net...

possibilities.



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Originally Posted By: paul

so , if the junk is traveling at 20kph then the 4 craft towing the net would have to be traveling over 20kph to just catch up with the junk.


20kph ?????

Ready look at whipple shielding (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whipple_shielding)

=> impact shield used to protect manned and unmanned spacecraft from collisions with micrometeoroids and orbital debris whose velocities generally range between 3 and 18 kilometres per second

18 km per second is => 1080 km per min => 64800 Km per hour

You want to try and manouvre and match the speed of a piece of debris moving at that speed have you any understanding of the reaction time your spacecraft is going to have to pull that off.


To put in in perspective mach1 for a jet is between 1100-1200 kmph depending on height.

The particles are doing MACH 54 and you are going to match their speed to scope them up??????


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yea , I did write 20kph but I meant 20k kph sry.

and I wasnt trying to catch a micrometeoroid.

Quote:
orbital debris whose velocities generally range between 3 and 18 kilometres per second


so whats the problem?
are you just trying to make a mountain out of a molehill.

are you saying that 3 - 18 km/s is not possible?

earths escape velocity is apx 11.2 km/s

are you saying that people or computers that are piloting the craft remotely would be stupid enough to crash into the debri at a devastating velocity while retrieving the debri traveling at 3 - 18 km/s?

you are traveling around the sun right now at apx 66k/mph
and so is the computer screen in front of you how much damage would you do to the computer screen if you slowly reached out and touched it?

Quote:
you are going to match their speed to scoop them up??????


why not , as long as Im not using a gasoline powered piston engine there should be no problem.

and if it takes a few laps around the earth to catch up to it to bag it then theres still no real problem there either.

why do you want to make simple things sound difficult?

dont you already know that using reactionless propulsion you can scoop up all the debri and still have the same amount of energy you started with and plenty more?













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It is EXTREMELY difficult the particles have gravitational attraction to every other particle in space and they don't travel in straight lines they are wobbling and moving all the time thats why one can not say with certainty if one is going to hit the ISS.

So you are going to try and manouvre with an object wobbling at MACH 54 and close and capture it.

The only thing remotely like that at the moment is a patriot missle and thats maximum MACH 5 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIM-104_Patriot)

The earth speed has nothing to do with anything it is the relative speed of the two objects the earth is spinning under the patriot missle as it tries to knock out the enemy missle as well.

Last edited by Orac; 03/27/12 05:01 AM.

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Paul Physics.org has a discussion of such a planned speed matching satelitte and that is targetting to match only large satelites which have relatively modest wobbles the smaller objects would tumble and wobble around more.

Note the thurster and technical challenges listed.

http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-02-swiss-satellite-tackle-space-debris.html

Last edited by Orac; 03/27/12 01:40 PM.

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And the Swiss satellite will only take out one relatively large piece of debris. The small stuff will just keep on going and increasing in count.

Bill Gill


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Quote:
So you are going to try and manouvre with an object wobbling at MACH 54 and close and capture it.


the wobbling of a tiny object is null.

unless your trying to capture the object with a three pronged
fork.

unless the tiny wobbling objects are orbiting each other at a significant distance as they orbit the earth.

just how much of a wobble are you talking about?

say for a 1/2 inch cubed object , would its wobble show physical impossibilities?

a object cannot have a wobble more than its own size
and that wobble can only be due to its center of gravity
or its wobble can be due to its gravity and the combination of other objects gravities as the objects orbit each other.

speaking of three pronged forks.



why not attach a net to the four prongs in the above fork !!

huh...to simple and cost effective?

have you ever tried to use one of these in a game room to grab anything?

you only get a couple of tries then you have to put another quarter in and start over again.

finally

why not use reactionless propulsion such as described in the below video , I think , anyway it looks similar to something me and kalog was discussing in this forum before he left.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y77MUuP0gUk

in the above video you see a mass being accelerated inside a tube or on a rail in one direction and decelerated in the opposite direction , both the acceleration and deceleration would cause motion of the overall system in a single direction.

!!! the sun could shine light on solar pannels and the thing could stay in space and pick up all the trash because
the deceleration = energy generated , additional energy if ever needed could be had from solar panels.

BTW --- such a propulsion system would have no real speed limitations.





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Originally Posted By: paul
Quote:
Do we really know where all the bits of small junk are?


not all of them , sometimes when there is a collision there are hundreds more objects from the collision.

there are currently millions of debris in space these range from small parts to whole defunct satellites , LOL.

before long we will need to clean up our trash dump in space in order to use space for any purpose.

check it out , Lockheed Martin has thought about it too.

Quote:
We've seen a few concepts for to deal with all this junk, including recycling the dead satellites or capturing them with a giant net, but we are practically blind as to where all this space trash is going. We covered Lockheed Martin's plans to track space junk in the past, but the company just activated its prototype radar system that can monitor our entire sky and track more than 200,000 objects in orbit.


http://www.pcworld.com/article/251582/lo...pace_trash.html

according to the article above there are at least 20,000 known debri objects in orbit , these must be the larger ones , just think the 4 craft could be fitted with junk finding instruments that detect unknown debri and radios its telemetry to earth , that debri could then be scheduled for pick up later.

and the nice thing about using nets is that the 4 craft could take the full nets to a drop off point further out in space and then go to the ISS to get fitted with a new empty net...

possibilities.



Originally Posted By: Mike Kremer


Yes i have just read the article Paul, interesting, but I still can't see a physical net working.
Not only does it have to be deployed and opened up, but it has to be controlled at all times...lest it become more of a danger than the junk in space.
Which is probably why Lockeed and Raytheon are developing a Radar "Space Fence" to track the more dangerous pieces of Junk.
Then when a dangerous bit of junk is found ...The crew of ISS will have to be warned in time, to take avoidance measures, including any owners of the many Geostationary communication sats up there?

Note the greater the difference in speed between the lump of junk and a Geosynchro Satellites...the greater the danger
There are many satellites up there and they dont all circle the earth at 22200 miles up.
There are Polar orbiters as well. You can track most of them yourself here-in real time...Go to

http://www.n2yo.com/

I find 'under the ocean surfaces' more interesting than the Satellites. Hi.

***Thoughts
A novel way to get rid of smaller junk...might be to Zap it, or push it DOWN to a lower orbit, using a Military anti-missile Laser?



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Paul please read the wiki discussion of space debris in LOW EARTH ORBITAL (LEO)

=> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_debris <=

Quote:

The problem in LEO is compounded by the fact that there are few "universal orbits" that keep spacecraft in particular rings, as opposed to GEO, a single widely-used orbit

[... cut ..]

After space debris is created, orbital perturbations mean that the orbital plane's direction will change over time, and thus collisions can occur from virtually any direction. Collisions thus usually occur at very high relative velocities, typically several kilometres per second


What they are saying is they wobble because the earth, sun and moon wobble ... its called chandler wobble. You then add in slight atmospheric drag and its a reciepe for alot of movement especially on small objects.


The situation you are talking about is much higher up

Quote:

Debris at higher altitudes

At higher altitudes, where atmospheric drag is less significant, orbital decay takes much longer. Slight atmospheric drag, lunar perturbations, and solar radiation pressure can gradually bring debris down to lower altitudes where it decays, but at very high altitudes this can take millennia.[52] Thus while these orbits are generally less used than LEO, and the problem onset is slower as a result, the numbers progress toward the critical threshold much more quickly.



I have no doubt if you chase the debris for long enough you can get enough perturbation data to match it but that doesn't make it a speedy process.

I am with Mike you are much more likely to zap the small stuff rather than get anywhere near it.

Last edited by Orac; 03/27/12 05:51 PM.

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Quote:
I have no doubt if you chase the debris for long enough you can get enough perturbation data to match it but that doesn't make it a speedy process.


just how much perturbation are you talking about there
1 inch 1 ft 1 mile?

you still havent said just how much of a wobble you are talking about.

and I suppose that the current projects would be speedy , LOL
capturing 1 single object then burning up the craft and object durring the process.

just how long would it take to remove the 20,000 known and tracked objects?

I think that there would be no problem catching up to any orbiting object , nor would there be any problem capturing any orbiting object its wobble or speed would present no serious problems.

if the 4 craft were controlled by a computer and the computer "sees" an object that is not recognised as a valid operating satellite or platform then the 4 craft could be guided to the object then the 4 craft can detach from each other moving outward and away from their previous position and expand the net , then slowly capture the object in the net.

then the 4 craft could manuver towards the earth and apply a braking to release the object and let the object burn up all alone durring re-entry or simply point the object towards our sun and apply braking to send it into the sun to burn up.

and other than a object that has been set into a wobbling orbit due to a collision or some other force wouldnt a craft following behind a wobbling junk object also wobble?

and the 4 craft could just stay up in orbit around the earth doing this trash cleanup until they are replaced by newer versions of space trash trucks that scoop them up and send them into the earth to burn up.

you guys need a little imagination to go along with your negative thinking towards everything.

its a good thing there werent many of you doubters around when we first used the nazi war weapon ideas and turned them into a space program.

Originally Posted By: Albert Einstein
“Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited to all we now know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world, and all there ever will be to know and understand.”











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You can't quantify the wobble it's not like it's regular or really predictable in most cases.

Look conceptually it's like chasing a rock thats being thrown a few inches over the top of the pond.

At some points you will get periods where it's flying nice and constant a bit like you describe and is true at higher space orbits.

But randomly either because the atmosphere is slightly bulged because of terrain below or position of moon or sun or because the orbit of what you are chasing it will touch the atmosphere.

So in our rock example the rock just hit a wave on the pond.

What happens well anything .... our rock can bounce up, stop dead, sink into the water.

If it stops violently for example you will slam into it at extremely high speed.

This is why the tracking of the objects by SOCRATES updates twice a day (http://celestrak.com/SOCRATES/) and 200 odd very dangerous pieces are continually tracked.

You are sort of describing a stable space flight scenario and what you are describing would probably be true for recovering high orbit junk but not the 70% of junk that is a problem in LEO.

Ours is not negative thinking it's more understanding the problem correctly. If the scenario was as you picture SOCRATES could put out data like for a year ahead because all the orbits would be slow and predictable.


I believe in "Evil, Bad, Ungodly fantasy science and maths", so I am undoubtedly wrong to you.
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