How do you dispose of a 370,000kg space station?
From correspondents in Moscow
From:AP
July 28, 2011 10:45am
Maybe someone should come up with a space station recycling scheme. Picture: NASA / Paolo Nespoli
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IT'S the size of a football field, weighs more than 370,000 kilograms and one day, it's going to crash into the sea.
A Russian space official said overnight that once the mammoth International Space Station was no longer needed it would be sent into the Pacific Ocean.
It's a plan that's long been in the works and is a step to avoid the station becoming dangerous space junk.
The station was supposed to plunge into the ocean as early as 2015. The US recently extended its life until at least 2020, and there's been talk of keeping it going even longer.
Vitaly Davydov, deputy head of the Russian space agency, said the orbiting outpost would be destroyed in a controlled descent to Earth "so that there is no space junk left behind".
Russia sank its Mir space station in the Pacific in 2001 after 15 years in operation. Skylab, America's first space station, fell from orbit in 1979 after six years in space.
The International Space Station is the biggest orbiting outpost ever built and can sometimes be seen from the Earth with the naked eye. It's now big enough for six residents.
It now consists of more than a dozen modules built by the US, Russia, Canada, Japan and the European Space Agency.
From correspondents in Moscow
From:AP
July 28, 2011 10:45am
Maybe someone should come up with a space station recycling scheme. Picture: NASA / Paolo Nespoli
=======================================================
IT'S the size of a football field, weighs more than 370,000 kilograms and one day, it's going to crash into the sea.
A Russian space official said overnight that once the mammoth International Space Station was no longer needed it would be sent into the Pacific Ocean.
It's a plan that's long been in the works and is a step to avoid the station becoming dangerous space junk.
The station was supposed to plunge into the ocean as early as 2015. The US recently extended its life until at least 2020, and there's been talk of keeping it going even longer.
Vitaly Davydov, deputy head of the Russian space agency, said the orbiting outpost would be destroyed in a controlled descent to Earth "so that there is no space junk left behind".
Russia sank its Mir space station in the Pacific in 2001 after 15 years in operation. Skylab, America's first space station, fell from orbit in 1979 after six years in space.
The International Space Station is the biggest orbiting outpost ever built and can sometimes be seen from the Earth with the naked eye. It's now big enough for six residents.
It now consists of more than a dozen modules built by the US, Russia, Canada, Japan and the European Space Agency.
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