How to clean up our space waste

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  • Опубликовано: 25 янв 2025

Комментарии • 204

  • @DWPlanetA
    @DWPlanetA  Год назад +17

    What do you think, how can we manage to save space from becoming a junkyard?

    • @simsinacafe
      @simsinacafe Год назад +4

      The company who make and launch the satelite must reponsible for cleaning up their own junk.

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад +2

      I think few people understand what the challenges of space flight are so asking for opinions is not a good idea.
      The problem with catching them and de-orbiting them is it requires the de-orbit vehicle to match the exact speed and orbit of the debris. This costs a lot of fuel, and means it is not as simple as going to space and then collecting "floating" pieces of junk like a garbage truck does. All the debris are in different orbits, so for every debris fuel is required to match that orbit.
      Laser brooms seem the most promising since then you do not need to match orbit of the debris. You can even target smaller debris that are not worth sending de-orbit satellites to. I am happy they are finally being talked about. But it's stupid that the weaponization potential is highlighted so much for those specifically.

    • @1us7_MaT1jx
      @1us7_MaT1jx Год назад +1

      Yes,but it will cost a lot.

    • @johnnylangen2839
      @johnnylangen2839 Год назад +2

      What do you mean with We ?
      I will certainly not clean up Space Junk

    • @wildfotoz
      @wildfotoz Год назад +1

      I think we need something along the lines of Quark where we can scoop up the junk. Personally, instead of sending it back into the atmosphere, we should drop it off on the moon for when we colonize it and they can recycle the precious metals instead of spending even more money and polluting our atmosphere from the propellants, to send those precious metals back into space making them even more rare on Earth.

  • @Robert-z8t4m
    @Robert-z8t4m Год назад +47

    Perhaps every satellite launch should include a junk cleanup fee.

  • @h.vanzeijl3057
    @h.vanzeijl3057 Год назад +60

    New satellites should have de-orbiting hardware, much cheaper compared with launching a de-orbiter to hunt space junk. However, making de-orbiting hardware mandatory requires global legislation and that takes years if it ever will happen. But in the end, lower orbits will clean itself, though it will probably decades so not centuries.

    • @skyfish8781
      @skyfish8781 Год назад +8

      Furthermore burning up a bunch of metal and plastic in the upper atmosphere is not great for the atmospheric environment. This is why lifecycle extension and in space maintenance are the long term solution.

    • @dojelnotmyrealname4018
      @dojelnotmyrealname4018 Год назад +1

      The problem isn't satellites, the problem is debris. You can't rig explosives to things, cause they don't really function in space, so the only way to de-orbit a satellite is to burn the remaining thrust in reverse. That works for satellites, but not for debris. Since orbitall interception is an extreme accuracy problem, ideally we'd want to look into how you could de-orbit debris at range. And there's really only two and a half ways I can think of you could even realistically try that without causing enormous problems that are cost effective. Either you deploy some kind of magnetic system into orbit, you try to apply reverse thrust with a laser, or you launch a satellite with a relative gravity high enough to seriously affect any nearby debris. None of those are *easy*

    • @nightlightabcd
      @nightlightabcd Год назад +1

      They will lobby against that! So much for that, and that is the last we will hear of that!

    • @adriantcullysover4640
      @adriantcullysover4640 Год назад

      That will reduce the amount of junk, not eliminate it. There's still millions that are already in need of de-orbiting at the moment.

    • @randallsmerna384
      @randallsmerna384 2 месяца назад +1

      That requires millions of dollars in additional propel equipment for the sole purpose of re-entry.

  • @ethanholka3422
    @ethanholka3422 Год назад +90

    A scary thought is that we could be trapped on Earth for the rest of human history for not cleaning up our orbit now.

    • @jurgenparkour9337
      @jurgenparkour9337 Год назад +3

      I don't think so, we will find a way to clean this garbage pretty quickly

    • @BendsSpace
      @BendsSpace Год назад +6

      @Jurgen Parkour This really could end very poorly for us. The view glossed over it at 3:55, but these collisions are basically chain reactions. If one satellite breaks up, it creates a high speed high energy cloud that can hit other satellites going other directions, creating more clouds. The pieces could be the sizes of paint chips and still blow holes in satellites and a single satellite can create huge clouds. Preventing the satellite from becoming clouds like the video showed at the end is easy, cleaning up the results from not doing this preventative action is incredibly difficult.

    • @jurgenparkour9337
      @jurgenparkour9337 Год назад +2

      @@capturedflame we are finding ways to solve the problems of the envoirment

    • @jurgenparkour9337
      @jurgenparkour9337 Год назад +1

      @@BendsSpace I understand it could be bad for some years, but I don't think it could take more than a decade to solve this problem

    • @BendsSpace
      @BendsSpace Год назад +1

      @@jurgenparkour9337 That's fair. If it spirals out of control it would be really difficult and detrimental to modern society but could potentially be solved by future technology that painstakingly removes millions of incredibly high speed paint chip sized particles from the space around earth. A decade might be a little low, though I could see it taking 2-3 assuming a relatively bad situation.

  • @3ngan498
    @3ngan498 Год назад +6

    It will get to the point you can never leave the Earth

  • @FrankensteinDIYkayak
    @FrankensteinDIYkayak Год назад +4

    I saw an article on this 20 years ago where it stated that if there were no new high shedding spacecraft then the exponential increase of debris from the craft already in orbit would lead to LEO being unable to penetrate by 2025. whats the new date with all the new constellations?

  • @Phlegethon
    @Phlegethon Год назад +7

    I think about space everyday

    • @randallsmerna384
      @randallsmerna384 2 месяца назад +1

      No, Your teacher said that everyday in class you're spacey. It's not the same thing. 😜

  • @kedrednael
    @kedrednael Год назад +11

    At 7:41 the video does not show a laser broom in action! It shows a telescope that does laser-range finding of satellites and laser communication with satellites. Laser brooms have never been used or build.

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Год назад +3

      Hey there, good eye! These telescopes operate on ESA's laser ranging station in Tenerife. Thanks for this. 🌈

  • @nenitaschmidt7197
    @nenitaschmidt7197 Год назад +3

    Satelie should be registered, the country should pay for the clean up. Who shoot a satelite up should pay for the junk.

  • @ryanartward
    @ryanartward 8 месяцев назад +2

    Im wondering if instead of sending expensive and energy exhaustive probes to hault them down, maybe something that creates a "dust bunny" of space junk. Quagulating them into one mass and yank it down from orbid in mass. Metal in hard vacuum welds togeather so maybe something we could use to an advantage.

    • @meowoewoew
      @meowoewoew 3 месяца назад

      I think that would be more expensive that the energy ones , I'm not even sure of how it could be made

  • @Noukz37
    @Noukz37 Год назад +5

    Again Wall-E proves to be spot-on with it's predictions. 😓

  • @jedics1
    @jedics1 Год назад +2

    They so casually talk about just burning it up in earths orbit like it magically disappears but we end up breathing that crap....

  • @randallsmerna384
    @randallsmerna384 2 месяца назад +2

    Lasers. A multiple country Space Junk Coalition.

  • @taraswertelecki3786
    @taraswertelecki3786 11 месяцев назад +1

    These satellites and rockets are made of materials worth reclaiming. Recovery and recycling in space will likely become a reality.

  • @kedrednael
    @kedrednael Год назад +8

    Finally some talk about laser brooms! But the article titles are moving around nervously so we know we should be scared 7:51! ... Of course that laser is indeed being build with the goal to blind satellites so it's understandable.
    The technology to rendezvous, grab and deorbit satellites can also be weaponized, though it is much more expensive.

    • @elan-ln7ge
      @elan-ln7ge Год назад

      what about something like the ISS in space but its like a trash holder and we send mini drones with ionic thrusters and it sends it back to earth and slows it down to burn it in the atmosphere. And the trash holder has lasers to cut up the big pieces or something like that. What do you think?

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      @@elan-ln7ge If drones with ion thrusters are very small they cannot produce a lot of thrust, since they cannot generate a lot of electricity for their engine etc. So it will take a long time for those mini drones to change the orbit of debris.
      This means it's not easy to dispose the debris into the atmosphere with the mini drones without sacrificing the mini drone too. But still, you could use those drones to put the debris in much lower trajectory, speeding up their de-orbiting by years. It's a good idea but costs money.
      Lasers to cut up big pieces seems unnecessary and gives the risk of debris-creating-event in orbit.
      Why is the ISS-like trash holder necessary in your idea? Bringing the trash back to the trash holder probably takes much more fuel/time than deorbiting the trash.
      Your idea reminds me a lot of the VASIMIR orbital sweeper idea from ad astra (has an old video on youtube). In that idea the mothership made sense because that was the thing with the efficient engines, these engines are expensive, do not accelerate things quickly and require a lot of power. That's why they used those on the not-disposable mothership. Then you can bring cheaper drones with less-efficient- but higher-thrust engines to the trash.

    • @elan-ln7ge
      @elan-ln7ge Год назад

      @@kedrednael I feel like the space station could be useful in a few years time where the debris accumulates in larger amounts that it would be wasteful to send a few rockets every year just to clean it up. The space station could grind up the larger debris and then throw it to the atmosphere kind of like a slingshot. Also it would have already been de-orbittedd by the time it got caught and entered the station by a kind of capture device. What is your idea? Like if hypothetically there were a large number of debris that needed to be cleaned up. What would you do?

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      @@elan-ln7ge But you'd have to use rockets/drones/tugs to get the debris into the garbage collector. This costs fuel (probably much more than using the tugs to de-orbit the debris), so this means you need to launch more rockets. The slingshot idea is pretty cool. If something de-orbittedd it is no longer in space btw.
      To clean up space debris I think there are two possible solutions:
      1. ion truster powered drones, which dispose the debris into orbits so low they decay in a couple months instead of years/decades/centuries. By not going all the way into the atmosphere you can have the drone increase its orbit again to go to the next debris. But this still requires quite a lot of drones. Docking to the debris is going to be difficult with just ion thrusters, because they accelerate the spacecraft so mindbogglingly slowly (but for a long time).
      2. Probably the better idea is to place satellites in orbit with big solar panels to power lasers. The lasers ablate the target a little bit, that evaporated stuff is basically a thruster. So the advantage is you do not have to match orbit to the debris to move them. The satellite would give decelerating thrusts to many different debris, even debris that are so small they would not be worth catching with drones.

    • @taraswertelecki3786
      @taraswertelecki3786 11 месяцев назад

      LASER Brooms are merely ground based weaponry, that will be a legitimate target for attack with nuclear or conventional weaponry.

  • @SlashHarkenUltra
    @SlashHarkenUltra Год назад +2

    We need a space waste treatment plant

  • @DC9848
    @DC9848 Год назад +3

    Probably best to retrofit a spacex starship with powerful magnet, collect trash and compact into cubes that are either pushed towards Earth's athmosphere or even transported back to earth for recycling

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      Magnets are really useless, you need to get to a very similar speed and very close anyway. And starship has such a huge volume that compacting the debris in space is an unnessary risk which requires a heavy machine inside starship.
      The rest of the idea rocks!

    • @randallsmerna384
      @randallsmerna384 2 месяца назад

      You think that space agencies use ferrous metals?? That's cute...

  • @johng.8517
    @johng.8517 Год назад +3

    Every company and government involved shout pay a fee to clean up the space debris.

  • @1028이윤규
    @1028이윤규 Год назад +1

    i think that solving this problem is very difficult because this problem has relevented to the private industry

  • @SoFunMe
    @SoFunMe 4 месяца назад

    It seems that the most economical way to reduce/clean up space junk is to slow it down and let Earth's gravity pull the object down to burn up. This video covered a "space grappler" that appears to catch or latch onto an object and then slow it down to fall into the atmosphere. They should create a reusable grappler that will just slow the object down and then release it to fall from a specified point. I know they would have to continually recharge the grappler with propellant, so they would need a docking platform for them to recharge like a gas station. One of the satellite tracking companies referred to herein, would be empowered to 'fly' the many grapplers, and part of the cost of any launch would pay for the propellent delivery to the docking platform. They could operate hundreds of those grapplers around the globe and dozens of recharging platforms.
    As for new satellites being launched, an international treaty should be adopted mandating that every new satellite to be launched would be required to have a deorbiting mechanism to remove it from space when its mission is over. Nobody wants to risk lives or dollars because of space junk, so every nation would likely approve of the treaty. In 10 or 15 years, the space debris field would be half as crowded. But the next problem would be how to remove small pieces like screws and tools dropped in space that are too small to track and are flying faster than bullets! Maybe magnetized nets as big as a warehouse?

  • @himanshusingh0876
    @himanshusingh0876 Год назад +4

    Most of space debris created by G7 countries. So they must took cleaning responsibilities too. Why would everyone held accountable??

  • @verafleck
    @verafleck Год назад +11

    There was an early warning in 1978, by Kessler.

  • @hagopakasparian7732
    @hagopakasparian7732 8 месяцев назад +1

    The space junk is created by few countries, its their responsiblity to clear the junk they have created not the international community

  • @aditisk99
    @aditisk99 Год назад +1

    Can a giant magnet like thing be launched to bring stuff back?

  • @RolferShannon
    @RolferShannon Год назад +1

    Why isn't anyone talking about how This space junk is mass from the Earth that we were putting outside into the atmosphere. Just like a cells mitosis. It reminds me of something I heard Terrance McKenna say crawling out of the ocean is going to look like a tiny step in our evolution compared to what's coming next.

  • @officialkidwizard
    @officialkidwizard Год назад +3

    hey guys, I love the channel, but you guys SERIOUSLY need someone to help you guys level out the audio in your videos. please sort this out!

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Год назад

      Hey there. Thanks for your valuable feedback - we'll keep this in mind! 🌞

  • @intuitivme
    @intuitivme Год назад +3

    There is no talk about the biggest problem: all the small debris. How to get those out of orbit?

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад +1

      Laser brooms would be exceptionally suited for those I believe. Since the debris are lower mass. And the small debris are probably just pieces of things, so there's an even smaller explosive hazard. Not as if you are firing on half empty batteries or still pressurized fuel tanks.

    • @bobbynotbuilder4389
      @bobbynotbuilder4389 11 месяцев назад

      how would you do that when you cant even track them@@kedrednael

    • @rubenpena246
      @rubenpena246 10 месяцев назад

      Turion space, look it up

  • @K0ALA.
    @K0ALA. Год назад +17

    Surely we could create a giant ship-like ‘skip’. Which is non penetrable with armour similar to the space station. This skip could collect trash, compact it down with a crusher and then dock it into a transporter ship back to earth for recycling. Yes, it’s very Star Wars like, but it’s thinkable so therefore it’s doable

    • @K0ALA.
      @K0ALA. Год назад +2

      @@mactep1 what’s stopping the giant skip from matching the speed of the trash?

    • @mactep1
      @mactep1 Год назад +6

      So, like a starship to collect trash, except without the amour, since that part is impossible for anything bigger than a few millimeters (they are more than 4x as fast as bullets), the only way to remove a piece of space debris is to match their speed and collect them.

    • @mactep1
      @mactep1 Год назад +4

      @@K0ALA. nothing, exept fuel, since different pieces have different speeds

    • @katm9877
      @katm9877 Год назад +3

      There is no such thing as 'non-penetrable" at orbital speeds. A small piece of debris hits like a hand grenade. You hit something slightly bigger and your armour is just obliterated - and we don't have the resources to have enough ablative layers for the amount of debris that's already up there, let alone predicted for the future

    • @gothboschincarnate3931
      @gothboschincarnate3931 Год назад

      @@katm9877 Ballistic jell....

  • @lirenzeng592
    @lirenzeng592 Год назад +4

    Some of the old satellites are very outdate, useless and probably decommissioned but still floating around. If anyone of them is still moveable, they could be used to crash the floating junks back towards Earth.

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      This is not how it works. And that's actually the reason space debris are a problem. Things are not 'floating' in space. There's still gravity, and the reason the satellites do not fall back onto earth after a couple of seconds is because they are moving so fast they go around the earth. To stay in space the satellites are moving at 8 km/s near earth (20x speed of a bullet).
      If you were to collide two things without exactly matching their orbits (which costs a lot of fuel probably, much more than old satellites have), then it collides faster than a bullet. The two colliding things explode and shatter into many more pieces, which are still generally moving in the same direction. You just turned one cannonball into a gigantic shotgun blast.

  • @curtisaitken7027
    @curtisaitken7027 3 месяца назад

    Why is there no self de-orbit protocol in every satellite launched?

  • @IngeniousDimensions369
    @IngeniousDimensions369 Год назад +1

    Thank you.🫶🫶

  • @danielthorp8717
    @danielthorp8717 Год назад +1

    Hyperthetical thinking: What if the idea of creating a Junk ball that like a gell junk ball that absorbs sunlight and radiation like food and in turn grows in both size and Diametre, its set on a spiraling Orbit from high Orbit as it orbit spirals back towards earth on a trajectory orbit on its Orbits it collects impacts and absorbs space junk, in orbit. Once a certain size its size drags back into Earth's orbit and burns up over large areas water. Just like the crazy idea from Futerama junk ball heading towards earth.

  • @rajatdani619
    @rajatdani619 Год назад

    I was Sad as the Video didn't talk about Every satellite Having a De-orbit Manuever to let it comeback to earth after successful Retirement.

  • @adsbegon8405
    @adsbegon8405 Год назад +1

    If satellites were just put in a geostationary orbit, they could be made more efficient, much larger and we would need much less of them. sure the maintenance cost would be big but they could be made to last.

    • @adsbegon8405
      @adsbegon8405 Год назад

      And if we need to deorbit, a disassembler could be made which would bring it into the graveyard orbit and disassemble it piece by piece sending all the pieces into the atmosphere to burn up.

    • @suntzu1409
      @suntzu1409 Год назад

      What makes satellites in GEO "more efficient"?
      1 GEO can replace several LEOs, but GEO satellite are also significantly more expensive to manufacture and launch. Atmospheric drag is a lot more effective in LEO than in GEO. Anything in LEO will deorbit much faster than anything in GEO and cascading collisions can be sustained a lot longer in GEO

  • @bryansmith9231
    @bryansmith9231 Год назад +1

    Only the Kirby vacuum company can suck up this one? Good show though and thank you.

  • @emilyarchibald1900
    @emilyarchibald1900 Год назад +9

    Low earth orbit is about 99-1200miles away. I wonder if we had a super long cable with a pilotable magnet at the end to catch the more dangerous pieces and reel them back to earth. Kind of like magnet fishing but in space. It sounds crazy because its so far away but some people were considering building an actual elevator to space once so having a super long cable is probably possible.

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад +2

      The problem is everything is moving very quickly to circle the earth, otherwise it falls back to earth in minutes. Because at 400km high gravity is still 90% as strong as on earths' surface. So if you somehow have a static magnet connected to earth surface, you won't gently attract and catch debris. They will either wizz by or collide at 8km/s. 15x faster than a bullet.
      To keep space elevators in space the end has a counterweight that needs to be so high it goes beyond geostationary orbit, that's higher than 40,000km. At geostationary orbit you have a circular orbit if you go so fast that you go around the earth in one day. If you are lower gravity is stronger so you have to go quicker. If you are higher gravity is less strong so you have to go slower to go in a circle; Like the moon which takes a month to orbit the earth. If you try to go around the earth in one day above geostationary orbit you are going too fast, gravity is not strong enough to keep you close to earth, and you would fly away from earth. This 'centrifugal force' is what pulls the entire space elevator up.
      So having a space elevator just to low earth orbit is not possible, it will just fall down. You need the insane length to keep it up, but this means you also need a stronger material than we can produce, which is why space elevators are science fiction.

    • @gothboschincarnate3931
      @gothboschincarnate3931 Год назад

      impractical....but....a cable could pull a wide platform (steerable) of ballistic gel to cut a path?? we will save the world Emily.

    • @gothboschincarnate3931
      @gothboschincarnate3931 Год назад

      what a bout a mile wide asteroid pulled into orbit....covered in ballistic jell?

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад +1

      @@gothboschincarnate3931 You can't 'pull a platform on a wire' in space. It's not like dragging a net to catch plastic out of the ocean or off the road to clear a path. Everything is orbiting at 9 km/s in low earth orbit (15 times faster than bullet).
      The space junk problem mainly exists in low earth orbit. To put a mile wide asteroid in space requires insanely powerful rockets. Even the largest rockets we've build today would barely change the orbit of such an asteroid. After a while the asteroid orbit would decay and it would cause widespread devestation on earth. The ballistic gell doesn't change anything.
      If you hit ballistic gel with stuff at orbital velocity it will explode and many pieces will keep orbiting the earth. You just put more space debris in orbit.

    • @gothboschincarnate3931
      @gothboschincarnate3931 Год назад

      @@kedrednael If it froze it would. I didn't say it would be easy. Now get over here and help me push this dam asteroid!

  • @kinngrimm
    @kinngrimm Год назад

    maybe instead of laser on ground, laser satelites, regulated in size and output capability. Batteries that are filled by solar. Longterm but steadyly? When batteries have become better or we would at some point have fusion energy pocket reactors ... .

  • @forestgaming3993
    @forestgaming3993 Год назад +4

    Christ, 100 million euros for a single piece of trash cleanup. That is utterly terrifying!

    • @nbrowne1
      @nbrowne1 Год назад +4

      100 million euro for one satellite cheaper than 1 billion+ euro for the 100 million pieces a satelite could be smashed into

  • @ericolens3
    @ericolens3 Год назад

    7:34
    actually USA has a Space Police.
    the space force, although it would better reflect USA interests but its a Space Force

  • @beataplaya
    @beataplaya Год назад +2

    Science trying to solve the half of the problems it created.

  • @gothboschincarnate3931
    @gothboschincarnate3931 Год назад +1

    drag the bay with ballistic gel.

  • @SaianaKrishnaMehrotra-fr4qt
    @SaianaKrishnaMehrotra-fr4qt Год назад +2

    i live in space i confirm this

  • @hainsoe3775
    @hainsoe3775 Год назад +1

    Wherever people go, there left pollution.

  • @eggplantandpeach
    @eggplantandpeach Год назад

    Is there anywhere we haven't managed to trash?

  • @dantetre
    @dantetre Год назад +11

    I want to see a video when they explain long term responsibility and sustainability for egoistic CEOs like Elon Musk, who doesn't give a s#!t about this...

    • @DWPlanetA
      @DWPlanetA  Год назад +2

      Hey there. You could be interested in this - previously we made a video on climate reparations; who should be paying back who. Please check it out here 👉 ruclips.net/video/KGOvRn5_QRg/видео.html and let us know your thoughts in the comments. 🌱

  • @chaaipaau
    @chaaipaau Год назад +2

    Since space has a lot of space, as suggested by you, more or newer satellites should be parked further away from LEO. But there would be a lot of hues and cry over their finances, right!

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад +1

      Most satellites are launched to do something/ benefit something on earth. If you put them further away than LEO their entire function might be made impossible.
      And LEO has the advantage that there is still some air drag, so debris deorbit. If we put all the satellites in higher orbits and kessler syndrome really hits we could have a bigger problem.
      Perhaps we should incentivize better engines on satellites, so the low ones can stay in lower orbits, so if something goes wrong with them they really deorbit fast.

    • @chaaipaau
      @chaaipaau Год назад +1

      @@kedrednael Point well taken.. and I think it will be so, once it’s dire need arises..but until it’s happening, let’s suggest some weird idea’s.. because who knows what human ingenuity could lead upto! ✌🏻

  • @SophiaPerpetua
    @SophiaPerpetua 6 месяцев назад

    A coupe hundred thousand low-cost smart robots flying around in space seems like one solution. They seek out and attach to space junk and take it into the atmosphere to burn up. But someone would have to design such a robot.

  • @orbitia662
    @orbitia662 Год назад

    the spider & the tracker

  • @Tammy_Ammy
    @Tammy_Ammy Месяц назад

    All Satellites launched should be agreed by all continent representatives, for How meaningful is the mission for mankind // No Hobby stuff for the space experiments, that can be done on the simulators on earth.

  • @jiewang6845
    @jiewang6845 Год назад

    Why can we not just send a really big magnet to suck everything into one ball?

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      The problem is everything is moving very quickly to circle the earth, otherwise it falls back to earth in minutes. Because at 400km high gravity is still 90% as strong as on earths' surface. Things are not gently floating in weightlessness like on an ocean. With a magnet you won't gently attract and catch debris. They will either wizz by or collide at 8km/s. 15x faster than a bullet.

  • @US_Joe
    @US_Joe Год назад +6

    Ironic - It takes more space junk to track space junk. We will never learn. Heaven only knows the ramifications of human behavior. 👍👍👍

    • @BendsSpace
      @BendsSpace Год назад +2

      An old satellite isn't really space junk: people are worried about it's potential for space junk. Satellites go in all directions around earth at incredibly high speeds. If one satellite breaks into pieces, those pieces form a cloud of high speed high energy projectiles. This cloud can then hit other satellites, meaning satellites have to avoid it. If they don't, it creates more clouds and the problem increases in a chain reaction. The chances of a satellite hitting another satellite are super low, the problem is really small pieces hitting inactive satellites creating more small pieces. If a satellite has the ability to avoid space junk and de-orbit itself, there is very little problem with it.

  • @nightlightabcd
    @nightlightabcd Год назад +1

    First, one must understand, if they don't already know it, those that are making the profits from this are NOT going to have to pay for the cleanup, that will be on the governments, tax payers, while those that are responsible keep their profits!
    Meanwhile, the wealthy investors will be blessed with more tax cuts!!

  • @davidhewins
    @davidhewins Год назад

    #Cost of #space #junk is becoming a big #risk. The regulated private sector, motivated by #profits, will innovate to solve these problems, if government space agencies allow it.

  • @Rkcuddles
    @Rkcuddles Год назад +3

    Why do we need to capture? As long as we slow down whatever it is, it will de-orbit on it’s own. Isn’t most of what’s up there at least partially metallic? Who is working on solving this with magnetic fields?

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      They're not that magnetic, and they're moving much to fast to be affected by a magnet if it just passes by. It's moving 20x faster than sound!
      If you magically use magnets strong enough to adjust their speed in a couple milliseconds while passing by, you'd explode the satellite, ripping out the magnetic pieces.
      I think if we have technology to somehow stop satellites using magnetism we'd easily also have magnetic shields against bullets.
      One way to use magnetic fields is having a long conducting wire attached to a satellite. The satellites moves through earth magnetic field, so using such a conducting wire you can convert some of the kinetic energy to electricity, slowing the satellite down. But you'd need to get this conducting wire attached to the satellite somehow. So it's comparable to carrying/ connecting it to a drag-sail.

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad Год назад

      @@kedrednael If we speed up a space craft carrying a magnet, wouldn't the debris be slower in comparison? Like two vehicles moving at the same speed look like they aren't moving at all.

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      ​@@WanderTheNomad Exactly, but this still requires the space craft and debris to be nearby and nearly matched in speed. So it's not really different than harpooning it. Accelerating those last 30km/h of the 28,800km/h is not really the problem.

    • @Rkcuddles
      @Rkcuddles Год назад

      @@kedrednael it’s relative velocity that matters once the device gets going it won’t matter as much. And you don’t even need to match that speed. The devices can stay in geostationary orbit and work like a pulsing drag that subtly pulls and pushes on whatever it is as that thing flies by at 20x speed of sound. Over 1000 orbits, or however many, the object slows down enough to let gravity and atmosphere do their thing

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      ​@@Rkcuddles It is indeed the relative velocity that matters. If you have a geostationary thing with a wire to low earth orbit, so, you make a space elevator? The wire will only be going to go around 0.3 km/s in low earth orbit. Basically standstill. So this still suffers from the problem I outlined in my first comment.
      Getting thousands of close flyby's to debris is going to be a bit hard, especially because how are you going to precisely position the thousands of kilometer long wire that exerted a force on object sometimes? It is going to swing wildly. Even if it is a space elevator. The force you use to slow down the debris, will accelerate the wire.

  • @markusgritsch9105
    @markusgritsch9105 Год назад +1

    Not an expert, but a de-orbiter should be reusable. 3D printing is everywhere; why not use it for this use case? Laser-Sinter a small rocket engine made from powder you bring from earth (much smaller then those made by Relativity Space), put it on a larger piece, collect smaller fragments with a net as described in the video, fabricate a structure where you put the rocket on, and connect the net. Fuel the rocket and slow the thing down.

  • @albertomartinez2345
    @albertomartinez2345 Год назад +2

    BRING SPACE JUNK DOWN TO 🌎 EARTH FOR RECYCLING ♻️ PROBLEM SOLVED !!!

  • @stefandietmann5120
    @stefandietmann5120 Год назад +1

    First !! --> we should save our own environments we live in here ON earth. You know I can live without my smartphone or other satellite based treats but without a home or food it gets hard. So forget about space for now!

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      GPS and weather prediction save trillions of dollars each year.
      Just imagine how much more pollution there will be if our transportation system cannot use GPS anymore.
      Food production is a huge polluter, but it benefits insane amounts from weather prediction via satellites, and even infrared measurements of the ground using satellites.
      There would be more damage from storms if we cannot predict them as well anymore. And many of those satellites circle the entire earth, or are so high they see half of the entire earth, so also countries and continents that did not launch them are benefiting from them.
      The Ocean cleanup, which cleans plastic from the ocean also uses a lot of satellite data!
      And remember satellites were the first things to be solar powered, since you can't keep pouring gasoline in them up in space to power them. They were the main reason for innovation in solar energy in the past, and we wouldn't be at the efficiency level we are at now without that. Same for digital cameras and insolation materials.
      Using satellite data we can also map who is polluting the environment. Nowadays CO2 emissions is reported by each respective country on a basically voluntary basis... They have a lot of insentive to lie. We'll map it with satellites and there'll be no more doubt. We are also tracking methane leaks using satellites, this information is being used to stop many massive leaks.
      So those are some reasons why space travel is extremely important for our environments ON earth.

    • @BendsSpace
      @BendsSpace Год назад +1

      "Forgetting about space" doesn't mean ignoring problems. Climate change is a huge problem, but it doesn't mean other problems should be completely ignored. Space debris could potentially set off a large scale chain reaction making it almost impossible to get anything into space, and all it really needs to better regulation and resources very comparable to the amount space generates in the first place.

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad Год назад +3

      You need to understand that there are enough humans on Earth that we can focus on multiple problems at the same time. No need for "First !!"

    • @debbiehenri345
      @debbiehenri345 Год назад

      They did mention that satellites are required to monitor essential environmental aspects - such as ozone layer, Arctic ice, ocean warming. We really need to keep an eye on these things, and it's best done from space.
      However, we don't need companies like Spacex sending up as many stupid satellites as they do.
      The night sky is quite ruined now with these things constantly tracking across the sky, distracting the eye from events like meteor showers and lunar eclipses.
      I am quite sure that between Musk, other commercial ventures, and aggressively paranoid governments, they are going to make the night sky as scruffy as a litter-strewn beach and totally inaccessible for future launches of a much more important nature, such as space telescopes like James Webb.

    • @bobbynotbuilder4389
      @bobbynotbuilder4389 11 месяцев назад

      well no i wont be impossible it will just be slightly more risky@@BendsSpace

  • @VDaksith
    @VDaksith Год назад +3

    Can you make a video about what are the Elon musk precocious avoid this issue from his starlink system.

    • @NameName-rk6ov
      @NameName-rk6ov Год назад +1

      Speaking of he should be fined a massive amount for purposely sending a car into space (that was completely fake shit so I'm being sarcastic)

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад +4

      The idea is starlink satellites are low enough (580 km high) they still experience some air drag. If they become uncontrollable they would slow down, thus get lower, get more air drag, slow down more, get lower and burn up in earth's atmosphere.

    • @BendsSpace
      @BendsSpace Год назад +2

      The problem isn't with Elon Musk's satellites, its with irresponsible satellites. (Starlink had to do a lot of stuff to get approval for so many satellites, so the Starlink satellites are actually pretty good about this.) Starlink satellites can avoid collisions and deorbit themselves when they're finished.

  • @bobcratchet3736
    @bobcratchet3736 6 месяцев назад

    My parents make me go outside to smoke cannabis so I think about space every night

  • @HungryEatNow
    @HungryEatNow Год назад +1

    So much for reaching for mars and beyond…

  • @EarthCreature.
    @EarthCreature. Год назад +1

    Rocket Lab will launch the cleanup effort

  • @nightlightabcd
    @nightlightabcd Год назад

    I know how we can deal with that, we will allow thousands more LEO satellites , even though we don't need them, but there is money to be made! Soon, where there is a launch, they will have to okay it with SpaceX because SpaceX has so many satellites that it controls launches!

  • @thatundeadlegacy2985
    @thatundeadlegacy2985 Год назад

    how are they making money from it

  • @debbiehenri345
    @debbiehenri345 Год назад +2

    Yep, just like humanity. At every opportunity, we take our irresponsibility, littering and fighting to new frontiers.

  • @myboysd5772
    @myboysd5772 Год назад

    Nahh were fcked already reagrding this and almost everything else enviroment related disasters lol, but its okay to everyone if greedy people make profit like that right?

  • @p739-n2i
    @p739-n2i Год назад

    Yea, lets take our pollution out of space and put our oceans at point nemo. Yeah thats responsible!

  • @vwhitfield3129
    @vwhitfield3129 Год назад

    we could set up a scrap yard up in space this will save money bringing it back , then we coul recycle it to do space stations or somthing else with the metal that is up there.

    • @philipyoung7034
      @philipyoung7034 Год назад +1

      Do you mean like from that 1970's TV show starring Andy Griffith? Look up "Salvage One".

  • @addisonsmith7949
    @addisonsmith7949 Год назад

    What about cattery said space junk And take it back down to earth to be recycled You’re wasting perfectly good material

  • @DhirajPatra
    @DhirajPatra Год назад

    Who will pay for this? developed countries must pay and clean the debris

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад +1

      You say it as if undeveloped countries would otherwise pay for it. Like with plastic and e-waste etc.
      But in this case that is utterly impossible. To clean the debris requires a highly efficient and large space infrastructure. This is something undeveloped countries obviously do not have, at most they put up a couple of satellites.

    • @DC9848
      @DC9848 Год назад

      I am relatively sure where ever you reside, your country is utilizing the satellite data from western countries for weather, agriculture, navigation, communication, entertainment (internet) and security. So why should your country be free of the space junk tax?

  • @314kr
    @314kr Год назад

    Upsidedown lithosphere cake.
    They took the minerals that power the Earth and put them in the sky. 😂🌎🎼🕸️🤫Funny Earthlings

  • @jacobebsen1
    @jacobebsen1 11 месяцев назад

    Why don't you start with the blacknight. To scared probably

  • @horsejumpridego
    @horsejumpridego Год назад

    No back music please. Gone in 20 sec.

  • @dodgytrump9868
    @dodgytrump9868 Год назад +1

    Typical of human kind isn’t it? Leaving tracks behind, like on their underwear, and never cleaning up after themselves!

  • @fleachamberlain1905
    @fleachamberlain1905 Год назад

    "Man made": Was it really only men who made the junk?

  • @Seattle.
    @Seattle. Год назад

    Does feral particles
    Are
    Changing humanities psyche
    At a catastrophic level

  • @w2385-i2s
    @w2385-i2s Год назад +1

    Sue Russia

  • @tylermcnally8232
    @tylermcnally8232 Год назад

    We wont be alive long enough for it to matter.

  • @Ognortnrex
    @Ognortnrex Год назад

    This is a joke right?