Post date: Sep 16, 2011 8:54:15 PM
Defunct NASA science satellite expected to come crashing back to Earth this month.
NASA - A defunct NASA science satellite dispatched by a space shuttle crew in 1991 will come crashing back to Earth this month, with debris most likely landing in an ocean or unpopulated region, officials said.
The Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite, or UARS, was turned off in 2005, becoming another piece of space junk loitering in Earth's orbit. The 6.5-ton spacecraft is expected to re-enter Earth's atmosphere later this month, although exactly when and where is unknown.
Satellites and rocket bodies falling back to Earth are nothing new. Last year, about 400 small pieces of trackable debris returned to the atmosphere. The Russian Mir space station fell to Earth in 2001.
Spent rocket bodies re-enter at a rate of about one per week. Large spacecraft, like the 35-foot long, 15-foot diameter (10-6-metres long, 4.5-metres diameter) UARS, fall back to Earth about once a year.
Most of UARS will burn up in the atmosphere, but up to 26 individual pieces, with a combined mass of about 1,100 pounds (500 kg), will survive the fall, said Nicholas Johnson, chief scientist of NASA's Orbital Debris Program office at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.
The largest chunk, part of the spacecraft's structure, is expected to be about 331 pounds (150 kg), he added.
The debris most likely will land in an ocean or in an uninhabited region of Earth.
The satellite's orbit takes it over most of the planet, from as far north as northern Canada to the southern part of South America.
The chance that even one person will be struck by a piece of UARS debris is 1 / 3,200 of one percent, NASA says.
The satellite is so big, its plunge through the atmosphere will be visible -- if anyone is around to see it.