Being a huge six tonne satellite (the size of a bus) there is a 1 in 3200 chance it will hit land andmay actually injure or harm people should it impact in a populated area. Lets hope this does not happen.
Actual video of a pass of UARS satellite 8/9 days before atmospheric reentry, at an altitude of only 250km, taken from the ground with a 14" telescope:
News on the satellite:
Experts say there is a one-in-3,200 risk of the six-ton space junk hitting someone.
However, its speed means that there will only be a 20-minute warning before it strikes.
Debris is expected to scatter across a 500-mile area, with the biggest chunk weighing 300lb, the weight of a large refridgerator.
The anticipated landing area spans cities as far north as Edinburgh and as far south as Cape Horn, on the southern coast of South America
4 comments:
The title here is somewhat misleading. The satellite WAS the size of a bus, but the pieces that might make it to earth (26 pieces large enough to survive re-entry) are well, each a fraction of that size. Nothing the size of a bus is striking the earth. The yield of 26 smaller pieces is nowhere near one bus-sized piece. The threat to life isn't whether or not there is a HUGE loss of life, but whether ANYONE will be harmed, which has never happened.
We all know, that what goes UP, must come DOWN!..and THAT, can be
everyones concern, so if your pissed off, & biting your fingernails, then after tomorrow
you may not be worried!:/....eh?
Good luck, Cheers! & peace!
Watch this while listening to the eagles song the journey of the sorcerer :)
I agree w/ Maya_Man. Nothing like hype to get the ratings flow.
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