formerjerseygirl
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Close to 01:00 CET on Monday 11 November, ESAs GOCE satellite reentered Earths atmosphere on a descending orbit pass that extended across Siberia, the western Pacific Ocean, the eastern Indian Ocean and Antarctica. As expected, the satellite disintegrated in the high atmosphere and no damage to property has been reported.
My understanding, after my spouse's very long lecture about orbital curves and the polar fields, is that once the satellite re-entered the earth's atmosphere, the pieces ( if there were any) fall to earth, not all in one place, so there is some trajectory in place, but within a small-ish debris field.Do the heavy pieces that come off fall where it comes apart or keep going along the path until they fall?
My understanding, after my spouse's very long lecture about orbital curves and the polar fields, is that once the satellite re-entered the earth's atmosphere, the pieces ( if there were any) fall to earth, not all in one place, so there is some trajectory in place, but within a small-ish debris field.
They don't fall in any orbital path. Gravity pulls them to the ground ( or ocean, whatever) because no opposing force is acting upon them. Hope this helps.![]()
The 1,100-kilogram satellite disintegrated in the atmosphere but about 25% of it about 275 kilograms of space junk slammed into the Atlantic between Antarctica and South America, a few hundred kilometres from the Falkland Islands, ESA said. It caused no known damage.
http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/1...the-atlantic-ocean-after-running-out-of-fuel/
The 1,100-kilogram satellite disintegrated in the atmosphere but about 25% of it about 275 kilograms of space junk slammed into the Atlantic between Antarctica and South America, a few hundred kilometres from the Falkland Islands, ESA said. It caused no known damage.
http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/1...the-atlantic-ocean-after-running-out-of-fuel/
Well, I guess I won't find a piece when I rake my leaves then.
I'm off to play the lottery.
2 days to track the next one!
2 days to track the next one!
Will there be a "new" thread on the next satellite or are you going to use this one??
:wave: