Sa’id Mosteshar, a professor of international space law and the director of the London Institute of Space Policy and Law, said that a person would be able to claim compensation only if the debris harmed him or her or caused any damage to his or her property. He said he would be “happy to keep it” but was also interested in “a bit of compensation,” if the space agencies or company wanted it back. Miners said he had so far enjoyed learning the preliminary details about how the debris had landed and that he was not sure what would happen next. His own piece of debris is almost 10 feet tall by 1.3 feet, he said, and an official from the Australian Space Agency called on Thursday to say that its experts planned to visit his property next week to “have a look at it.” Miners, who has about 5,500 sheep, 100 cattle and 30 horses on his farm in the district of Numbla Vale. “Then everybody found out, and I’ve had about 300 calls,” said Mr. ![]() Wallace called the Australian national broadcaster, which later reported on the farmers’ discoveries and said that three pieces of debris had been found. Wallace, had called the authorities to report the other debris that he had found on his own property earlier in July. Miners, who was born on the farm where he discovered the unidentified debris, said that his neighbor, Mr. Lane said by phone from his restaurant, Tuscany In Dalgety. “If there’s three we know about, there could be another 10 we don’t know about,” Mr. Ron Lane, who owns a restaurant in the town of Dalgety, said that most people in the area - with the notable exception of himself - were not especially worried about additional space debris potentially landing on them or their homes. Miners discovered the space debris on July 25 lies about 100 miles south of the capital, Canberra. The debris had re-entered the atmosphere after 22 days in orbit. Pieces of the burning rocket debris landed on a farmer’s property in Washington State. Last year, a malfunction caused a SpaceX rocket stage to complete an uncontrolled re-entry into Earth’s atmosphere near Seattle in what looked like bright objects lighting up the night’s sky. ![]() This was the third flight of Long March 5B, China’s largest rocket, which made what is called “uncontrolled re-entry” back to Earth. The possibility that debris from the rocket could have struck a populated area led people around the world to track its trajectory for days. “It typically burns up in the atmosphere over the open ocean, posing minimal risk to public safety,” the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement. The trunk segment, which is used to carry cargo and also includes the spacecraft’s solar arrays and radiators, is jettisoned from the body of the capsule shortly after the burn is completed when it goes out of orbit. With more information, “we could have a better assessment of, ‘Did we just get really unlucky, or should we expect this from all the trunk re-entries if they happen over land?’” ![]() He said that in the new commercial era for space exploration, it has been much harder to get technical information from private companies to assess risk. McDowell said, but he added that there was no indication that there was anything particularly risky about the trunk. “It was a bit surprising to me that so much of the trunk survived the heating process of re-entry,” Dr. Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist at the Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., said that it’s not unusual for space debris to be found on land after an uncontrolled re-entry. SpaceX did not respond to a request for comment. However, with more spaceships entering orbit - such as those from private companies like SpaceX, founded by Elon Musk - impacts on land may happen more frequently. Most space debris burns up while re-entering the atmosphere, and much of what’s left over often falls in the ocean. Space debris refers to equipment in space that no longer works.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |