News UARS about to fall from the sky

It was kind of implied... :dry:

Hey, this is the only space relating thing my parents have mentioned to me since the last shuttle launch! :D I'm so proud of them. :)
 
Normandie ? Or between Perpignan and Marseille ? It seems that that "bus" dont take travellers aboard.
 
orbitdisplay.aspx


Image updates as you refresh.
 
Where does Heavens-Above they get the TLEs from?
 
i heard on the radio this morning that theres a 1:3000 chance of it hitting a person. its not likely, but i bet its got some operators scared witless!

1:3000 is quite likely to be hit by a satalite, dont you think
 
Only if you are standing next to 2999 other people...?

N.
 
NASA update number 9

As of 9:30 p.m. EDT Sept. 22, 2011, the orbit of UARS was 110 mi by 115 mi (175 km by 185 km). Re-entry is possible sometime during the afternoon or early evening of Sept. 23, Eastern Daylight Time. The satellite will not be passing over North America during that time period...

Phew, so that's OK then. It won't be putting any precious American lives at risk, only foreigners whose worthless existences it would be a mercy to extinguish.

UARS = ISS in 4 to 5 years.
 
I bet it will reenter and impact at at completely "unspectacular" location, somewhere over the oceans near Antarctica, with noone able to spot it, and the remains of the debris sinking to the deep oceanic floor.
 
All bets are off until the very last moment. Remember to duck, though...
 
At the news here they said : "Nothing to worry about, but if you find a small piece of it in your garden, NASA asks you to avoid touching it. Not because it could be cutting or toxic, but because it is the property of the USA."

So you're supposed to plant 4 posts around it, and unfold a "crime scene" line around them, in the very hypothetical possibilty that an US representative one day comes to bring it back home ? :lol:
 
So you're supposed to plant 4 posts around it, and unfold a "crime scene" line around them, in the very hypothetical possibilty that an US representative one day comes to bring it back home ? :lol:
Better would be to unfold "Territory of the United States of America. DO NOT CROSS" tape. Otherwise police might mistake it with one of theirs. :lol:
 
Semi-related -
NewScientist: Second big satellite set to resist re-entry burn-up:
Even if NASA's 6-tonne UARS satellite does not cause any injury or damage when it re-enters the Earth's atmosphere today, there is more space junk headed our way next month. A defunct German space telescope called ROSAT is set to hit the planet at the end of October – and it even is more likely than UARS to cause injury or damage in populated areas.

No one yet knows where UARS (Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite) will fall to earth. Although most of the craft's mass will be reduced to an incandescent plasma, some 532 kilograms of it in 26 pieces are forecast to survive – including a 150-kilogram instrument mounting.

NASA calculates a 1-in-3200 chance of UARS causing injury or damage. But at the end of October or beginning of November, ROSAT – a 2.4-tonne X-ray telescope built by the German aerospace lab DLR and launched by NASA in 1990 – will re-enter the atmosphere, presenting a 1 in 2000 chance of injury.

The higher risk stems from the requirements of imaging X-rays in space, says DLR spokesperson Andreas Schütz. The spacecraft's mirrors had to be heavily shielded from heat that could have wrecked its X-ray sensing operations during its eight-year working life. But this means those mirrors will be far more likely to survive a fiery re-entry.

{...}
 
Please de-orbit your debris !! (in a controlled fashion) :facts:
 
Some trivia around UARS

The post STS-48 mission highlights video - this was the mission that released UARS into orbit -> http://www.nss.org/resources/library/shuttlevideos/shuttle43.htm

What are the real odds of getting hit by it
?

Satellite risk v lightning risk

1 in 3,200: UARS hitting a person
1 in 21 trillion: You being hit by it
1 in 10,000: Being struck by lightning in the US during your lifetime
1 in 14m: Getting all six numbers in UK National Lottery

(source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15023115)

and on a more humorous note - Can you dodge falling satellite debris?

So is it possible for humans to ensure they don't get hit?

"Potentially, you could get out of the way," says Richard Crowther of the UK Space Agency, which is a member of a global network of agencies that monitors space debris.

"But if you're going to spend all the time looking up then you're at greater risk of an accident bumping into something than something coming down on you."

Equally, if you want to avoid the risk of being hit completely, he says, then you need to go beyond 57 degrees latitude north (Scotland or Quebec) or south (further south than the southern tip of Argentina).

"But travelling there will involve a greater risk than the risk of being hit by this."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15023115
 
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Looks like I'm safe :lol:. First pass this evening will be south of my position, second pass will be north. I hope it decides to stay up until 21:00 GMT.

My current guess is a reentry close to Central America.
 
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