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ESA's Clean Space aims to cut orbital debris for greener environment
Jul 10, 6:08 pm
Washington, July 10 (ANI): ESA's new Clean Space initiative is developing methods of preserving near-Earth space and the terrestrial environment from orbital debris.Responding to public environmental concerns, Clean Space aims to reduce the environmental effect of Europe's space activities, cutting waste and pollution on Earth and in orbit.Industry is contributing to ESA's draft plans for developing Clean Space technologies: new tools to assess environmental effects, more eco-friendly replacements for materials and techniques, and ways to halt the production of more space debris and bring down existing debris levels. ESA Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain emphasises that implementing Clean Space is a major objective of Agenda 2015, the Agency's upcoming action plan."If we are convinced that space infrastructure will become more and more essential, then we must transmit the space environment to future generations as we found it, that is, pristine," he pointed out."We can therefore say that Clean Space is not a new programme, but instead a new way of designing all of ESA's programmes. I would like ESA to become a model agency in this respect."We will not succeed alone; we will need everyone's help. The entire space sector has to be with us," he said.ESTEC, ESA's technical centre in Noordwijk, the Netherlands, hosted a Clean Space workshop in June, jointly organised by
ESA and industry body Eurospace.On Earth, Clean Space involves evaluating the environmental impact of future space projects, as well as monitoring the likely effects of forthcoming legislation on the space industry - environmental law being an extremely fast-moving field.Life-cycle assessment will be important for evaluating the environmental effects of space technologies, from their initial design and manufacture to their end-of-life.In the workshop, Environmental consultancy BIO Intelligence Services described the current wide employment of life-cycle assessment in other industrial sectors. Environmental friendliness often goes hand-in-hand with increased efficiency - offering industry competitive advantage.Novel manufacturing processes such as 'additive manufacturing', where structures are built up in layers, or 'friction stir welding', where lower weld temperatures use less materials and energy to do a better job.Reducing the need for often costly waste disposal is another win-win: rocket maker Safran is working on a biological method of breaking down toxic solid-propellant waste. In Gravity, runaway orbital collisions fill low- Earth
orbit with a lethal debris cloud.In real life, of the 6000 satellites launched during the Space Age, less than 1000 remain operational. The rest are derelict and prone to fragment as leftover fuel or batteries explode.Orbiting at 7.5 km/s or more, even a 2 cm screw has sufficient 'lethal diameter' to take out a satellite. The workshop discussed various means of minimising future debris production, such as tethers or sails to help drag abandoned satellites out of low orbit within 25 years.Satellite re-entry also needs to be a safer process - sometimes entire chunks of satellites have hit the ground intact. New 'design for demise' concepts aim to prevent that.But even if all space launches stop tomorrow, simulations show that debris levels will keep growing. Active removal is also needed, including robotic missions to repair or deorbit satellites. (ANI)
Pubgoer clicks UFO's pic in UK
Jun 19, 4:59 pm
London, June 19 (ANI): A pubgoer has allegedly taken a photograph of two glowing discs hovering above Bracknell in Berkshire last Friday before speeding out of view.
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NASA's Cassini may reveal how Earth looks like from Saturn
Jun 19, 3:21 pm
Washington, June 19 (ANI): On July 19, 2013, NASA's Cassini spacecraft will be turned to image Saturn and its entire ring system during a total eclipse of the Sun, as it has done twice before during its previous 9 years in orbit.
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3 large asteroids orbit Sun in exactly same time period as Uranus
Jun 19, 1:10 pm
Washington, June 19 (ANI): Astrophysicists from the Complutense University of Madrid have confirmed that Crantor, a large asteroid with a diameter of 70 km, has an orbit similar to that of Uranus and takes the same amount of time to orbit the Sun.
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'Speedy' winds on Venus becoming even faster
Jun 19, 1:10 pm
Washington, June 19 (ANI): The speedy winds of Venus have steadily been getting faster over the last six years, the most detailed record of cloud motion in the atmosphere of the planet chronicled by ESA's Venus Express has revealed.
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