A US Air Force meteorological satellite disintegrated in outer space last month, breaking into 50 fragments and contributing to the approximated 130 million pieces of “space debris” orbiting Earth.
The growing quantity of debris has intensified concerns regarding the “Kessler syndrome.” Named after an American astrophysicist, Donald Kessler, it describes a situation where a collision of space debris triggers a sequence of similar events. Specialists disagree on the likelihood of such a scenario occurring and the extent of the threat it poses to our planet.
What is Kessler syndrome?
Although its precise definition remains “unclear,” as stated by CNN, Kessler syndrome broadly characterizes a chain reaction scenario where a collision “generates a cloud of fragments” that “collide with other extraterrestrial objects,” producing “additional debris.” This “cascading effect” may persist until Earth’s orbit becomes “so congested with junk” that it affects daily life.
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What impact could it have?
In a worst-case scenario, a “cloud of space debris encircling the Earth” jeopardizes “interrupting operations” for all technology dependent on satellites, like weather forecasting, GPS, and television, according to the Daily Mail. In particular, metallic space debris could “disturb Earth’s magnetosphere, exposing all forms of life to harmful cosmic rays.”
A Kessler syndrome event “would influence every inhabitant on the planet,” remarked Paul Lynam, an astronomer at the University of California’s Lick Observatory. An “overpopulated orbital environment” would also hinder ground-based telescopes and could jeopardize “our aspirations of traveling to the Moon and beyond,” stated the National Space Centre.
Has it already commenced?
The “scientific community has not yet achieved a consensus regarding whether Kessler syndrome has begun or, if it hasn’t, how severe it will be when it does start,” according to Aerospace America magazine. The International Space Station “has not been destroyed, payloads reach deep space without issues, and we are not confined on Earth” due to debris, so either the “disaster” has not yet “befallen us” or we “simply fail to recognize it.”
Space debris currently possesses a total mass of over 9,300 tons, as per the European Space Agency, which indicates that the “risk for catastrophic collisions” will also “increase gradually.” Doubling the number of objects in space enhances the collision probability by roughly four times.
How significant is the issue of space debris?
The volume of orbital debris is expanding rapidly, as mentioned by Ars Technica. Previously, the global community launched around 80 to 100 satellites into orbit annually; however, that figure soared past 1,000 in 2020, exceeded 2,000 in 2022, and more nations and enterprises are entering the satellite sector. Per the Union of Concerned Scientists, up to 57,000 could occupy low-Earth orbit by 2030.
Objects the dimensions of blueberries circling the Earth “carry the kinetic energy of a descending anvil,” while there are “tens of thousands of pieces of trackable debris measuring the size of a softball or larger that hold the kinetic energy equivalent to a sizable bomb.”
Nonetheless, it’s “not all bleak,” stated the National Space Centre. Prominent space experts are “developing solutions,” and prototypes “have already undergone testing, with missions scheduled” to “assist in cleaning our orbit.” The RemoveDebris initiative, led by the University of Surrey, successfully captured a shoebox-sized object by “enveloping it with a large net,” harpooned another piece of “dummy debris,” and will deploy a “massive membrane” to guide the object toward Earth, so it “burns up safely in our atmosphere.”