The
proliferation of garbage in low Earth orbit has reached a point where it will
increase in the coming decades even if all rocket launches were canceled
starting now, according to research by NASA's Johnson Space Center.
The
satellites and rocket stages designed and launched before the seriousness of
the problem was recognized are like time bombs, waiting to break apart in the
coming years on combustion of their remaining fuel thereby multiplying the
pieces of space garbage.
At some
point, the growing population of orbiting debris increases the likelihood that
pieces will collide into each other, spawning still more space junk.
The problem
is especially acute at altitudes of between 900 and 1,000 kilometers.
Research by
NASA's Nicholas L. Johnson and J.C. Liou conclude
that even if all launches were stopped immediately, the debris population would
remain constant for about 50 years, then increasing noticeably after that as a
result of in-orbit collisions.
No less an
expert than Arthur C. Clarke, who first discovered the virtues of geostationary
orbit 36,000 kilometers above the equator for communications satellites, warned
that space exploration is more likely to be shut down by low-orbit debris than
by anything else.
In response
to Space News inquiries, Johnson said July 26 that while removal of large
pieces of debris might be the only answer to the problem, "no cost-effective
means to remove derelict large objects from Earth orbit has yet been
identified. This remains an area of research."
The breakup
in May and June of two Russian rocket stages illustrates the problem.
In May, the
third stage of a Russian Tsyklon rocket spontaneously exploded, creating more
than 50 pieces of debris large enough to be tracked by the U.S. Space
Surveillance Network of ground-based sensors. The network can identify objects
in low Earth orbit as small as 10 centimeters. For objects in geostationary
orbit, objects of 1-meter-diameter and larger can be tracked.
In June, a
motor from a Russian Proton rocket engine launched in the late 1980s broke up.
The engine was in a highly elliptical orbit with a perigee of 655 kilometers
and an apogee of 18,410 kilometers, according to a NASA study of Space
Surveillance Network data.
Tsyklon and
Proton rocket stages and motors are well-known among those tracking orbital
debris. The May breakup was the fifth of its type since 1988 for a Tsyklon
stage. Simulations of the trajectory of the 50-plus pieces of junk created in
the May event suggest that nearly half of them will re-enter Earth's atmosphere
and burn up this summer.
The June
Proton motor breakup was the 34th of its kind and created more than 70
detectable pieces of debris.
Tracking
relatively small pieces of debris needs to be done regularly because their
trajectory can be predicted only for a few days, Johnson said. "Hence, it is
not possible to determine if any Tsyklon or Proton breakup debris might come
close to any operational spacecraft for other than very short periods," he
said.
Tsyklon and
Proton once both employed a design that did not permit their upper-stage
engines to be rendered passive in orbit, meaning they would not explode from
the combustion of their remaining fuel, or following a collision with another
piece of debris.
Johnson
said Tsyklon vehicles, built by the Yuzhnoye Design
Bureau of Ukraine, continue to feature the kind of upper stage that makes them
dangerous as debris generators. The Proton vehicle upper stage has been
redesigned, he said, and now features engines that are rendered passive in
orbit.
Johnson
said there remain slightly more than 100 Tsyklon stages and more than 50 Proton
stages orbiting the Earth with the same debris-generating design.
The
Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee, whose members include most of
the active space-faring nations, has developed guidelines for satellites and
rockets to reduce the chance that they will contribute to the debris problem
once in orbit.
The U.S.
Federal Communications Commission, which licenses U.S. satellites, also has
developed mandatory rules for debris mitigation.
NASA keeps
what it calls a "box score" of nations responsible for the current debris
population as measured by ground-based radars and telescopes. As of July 4, the
U.S. Space Surveillance Network was tracking 9,680 pieces of debris.
Not
surprisingly, the former Soviet Union and the United States are running a close
race for first and second place among the nations responsible for debris, with
4,151 and 4,058 pieces, respectively.