Garbage collectors in space
A sprawling garbage heap floats high above Earth. It contains  fragments of broken-down satellites and pieces of used rockets, as well  as a few unusual objects like gloves and cameras accidentally dropped by  astronauts. The problem isn’t going away; it’s getting worse. The  number of pieces of space garbage gets larger every year. Around the  world, space agencies worry about the trash because even small bits of  litter — no larger than the fingernail on your pinkie — can cause  serious damage to satellites or spacecraft.
In a recent study, engineer Hugh Lewis and his colleagues from the  University of Southampton in England ran some calculations on space  junk. In August, they reported that the growth of space junk could slow  down if every year about 10 large pieces were removed. (The largest  piece of space junk is about the size of a refrigerator.)
If a broken or defunct satellite doesn’t fall back toward Earth and  burn up in the atmosphere, it continues to whiz around our planet. It  may crash into another satellite or used rocket and break into smaller  pieces. These pieces are called orbital debris.
In February 2009, a Russian satellite and a U.S. satellite plowed  into each other over northern Siberia. The collision resulted in more  than 2,000 new pieces of space junk that continue to orbit Earth. NASA’s  Orbital Debris Program Office tracks the larger of these pieces to make  sure they don’t smash into other satellites.
In March of this year, scientists saw that the International Space  Station was headed toward a four-inch piece of space garbage left over  from the 2009 collision. They sounded the alarm, and in April the space  station changed its course to avoid the debris. This was the fifth time  in less than three years that the station has changed its course to stay  safe from floating debris.
Not  all space junk stays in space. In January 2001, this heavy chunk of a  Delta 2 rocket fell to earth about 240 kilometers (150 miles) from Saudi  Arabia’s capital, Riyadh. Credit: NASA Orbital Debris Program Office
Another situation, related to greenhouse gas emissions, is lengthening how long any piece of space trash remains in orbit.
As things in orbit push through Earth’s atmosphere, they slow down.  This braking action, called friction, not only lowers the orbit of space  junk but also increases the chance it will burn up as it slows down.  Friction is currently the only thing that removes space junk from orbit.  But as more emissions of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, rise into  the upper atmosphere, this gas cools off a layer called the  thermosphere. As a result, the thermosphere is becoming less dense.  (Density is the amount of matter packed into a particular volume, and  materials with more density are thicker. Maple syrup, for example, is  denser than water.) The drop in density means there’s less friction on  space junk, allowing the trash to orbit longer. And this increases its  opportunity to hit something.
The recommendation by Lewis and his team to send up space-garbage  collectors is easier said than done. Scientists can’t remove 10 pieces a  year because “we don’t know how to clean up even one,” Nicholas Johnson  told Science News. Johnson is the scientist in charge of  NASA’s Orbital Debris Program Office, which keeps track of large pieces  of debris and helps spacecraft and satellites avoid dangerous  situations. He said that even though a space cleanup is “desirable,”  it’s not going to happen in the next few years. “There’s nothing on the  horizon” for a space trash pickup program, he said.
Right now, the risk of a serious collision is low. Since people began  sending rockets into space, Johnson said only two operational  satellites have ever been damaged. He said it’s possible that a  dangerous or deadly collision could occur, but the chance of that  happening is small.
For now, Johnson told Science News, his team’s near-term  priority is tracking smallish pieces of space debris. There are more of  them, they’re harder to see from Earth and they’re more likely to cause  trouble.
“If we’re going to lose spacecraft in the next two decades,” Johnson  said, “we’re [probably] going to lose them to small things we  [currently] can’t track.”
POWER WORDS (adapted from the New Oxford American Dictionary and NASA.gov)
atmosphere The envelope of gases surrounding Earth or another planet.
debris Scattered fragments, typically of something  wrecked or destroyed. Space debris includes the wreckage of defunct  satellites and spacecraft.
density A measure of the consistency of an object, found by dividing the mass by the volume.
friction The resistance to movement that occurs when  two things — solids, gases, liquids or a combination of two of these —  are in contact. Friction generally causes a heating, which can damage  the surface of the materials rubbing against one another.
orbit The curved path of an object or spacecraft around a star, planet or moon.
thermosphere An upper region of the atmosphere that  extends to nearly 400 miles above Earth’s surface. In the thermosphere,  temperature increases with height because of the sun’s energy.
