Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumSince We're Filling Our Planet With Garbage, Let's Not Forget Near-Earth Space And The Kessler Effect
EDIT
Theres now a huge amount of junk, or space debris, in orbit. Almost 37,000 objects more than 10cm in size are being tracked by space surveillance networks, according to the European Space Agency (Esa) figures for September. That stuffs dangerous, dont get me wrong, says John Janka, global government affairs and regulatory chief officer at the communications company Viasat, who is based in Washington DC. But theres also according to Esa, more than 1m pieces of debris between 1cm and 10cm that are lethal and non-trackable. What does that mean? It means you cant see it, you cant avoid it, and today you cant shield your satellite against it.
But the concern over debris is about more than it damaging an individual satellite or craft. Space operators are acutely aware of a danger known as the Kessler effect or syndrome, named after the Nasa scientist Donald J Kessler, who in 1978 along with Burton G Cour-Palais, published a theory that as the number of satellites increased, so would the probability of collisions. As collisions increase, the more debris is produced, and the greater the risk of more collisions. At a critical mass, one collision could trigger an unstoppable cascade of collisions, such that an entire orbit could be rendered useless. A 2022 overview paper by Viasat paints an almost apocalyptic picture: If a tipping point is reached, all of humanity would watch helplessly as space junk multiplies uncontrollably. Without timely intervention, we risk bringing the space age to an inglorious end, and trapping humanity on Earth under a layer of its own trash for centuries, or even millennia.
It continues: Not only an abrupt end to space exploration, but also the loss of all the benefits of space technology including navigation, weather forecasting, climate measurements, and even satellite broadband (the intended purpose of the megaconstellations being deployed). As well as numbers, Janka points out, size is an issue. Were putting up tens of thousands of satellites, and were putting up increasingly bigger satellites into low Earth orbit bigger in terms of cross-sectional area and mass were finding that were having perhaps some unanticipated impact on things like collision risk.
He compares it to a bigger sail on a boat catching more wind. The bigger satellite, the more cross-sectional area, the greater chance of being hit by debris. And bigger satellites create more debris when they are hit.
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https://www.theguardian.com/science/2024/oct/19/humanity-would-watch-helplessly-as-space-junk-multiplies-uncontrollably-has-the-number-of-satellite-launches-reached-a-tipping-point

Response to hatrack (Original post)
jfz9580m This message was self-deleted by its author.
hunter
(39,441 posts)Alas, it turns out we'll not run out of fossil fuels ever. There's more than enough to destroy whatever is left of this world as we know it, including our civilization.
I have similar feelings about the Kessler effect. It could be a good thing, helping our civilization focus it's attention on what's truly important.
Sending people to the moon again, or blanketing the surface of the earth with high speed internet and cell phone coverage, really isn't that important. Space communication systems are contributing to the destruction of earth's remaining wilderness.
I hate it that any of my tax dollars support military, commercial, or manned space projects.
2naSalit
(96,312 posts)Which seems inevitable, will force humans to make use of all that unused brain we choose to ignore.
What makes me shake my head is that nobody is willing to admit that we humans will not be able to survive anywhere else in our physical form, requires too many resources to mimic earth conditions suitable for our survival. Just not doable and yet we spend billions upon billions in pursuit of such goals.
Really, how practical is any of the space program? We look to that and refuse to make life livable for those of us on this planet now. Makes me think we've already gone, collectively, insane. We just refuse to admit it.
Response to 2naSalit (Reply #3)
jfz9580m This message was self-deleted by its author.
OKIsItJustMe
(21,209 posts)❝The pioneer and would-be spacefarer Elon Musk said he would like to die on Mars, though not on impact. Martian conditions suggest death on impact might be preferable.❞
― James Lovelock, Novacene: The Coming Age of Hyperintelligence
jfz9580m
(15,589 posts)That looks like a fun read
Thank you!
Never heard of The Marching Morons..or if I did, I have forgotten it.
Looks interesting. I am reading it..
James Lovelock was an interesting guy..
NickB79
(19,852 posts)A Kessler Event trapping a species on their home world.