NP Rank:
U.S. and Russian satellites collide
This is very unusual.
As far as I know this
has not happened before.
The international space station does not appear to be threatened by the debris, they said, but it's not yet clear whether it poses a risk to any other military or civilian satellites.
"They collided at an altitude of 790 kilometers (491 miles) over northern Siberia Tuesday about noon Washington time," said Nicholas Johnson, NASA's chief scientist for orbital debris at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. "The U.S. space surveillance network detected a large number of debris from both objects."
There could be danger
to other satalites from
this debris for decades.
NowPublic on Facebook
Crowd Power
-
garrettc
Oxford, United Kingdom -
lucindalunacy
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States -
158
St. Louis, Missouri, United States -
c4lin
United States
Recommendations (31)
-
kuuva
Sunnyvale, California, United States
-
René
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States -
Amy Judd
Vancouver, Canada -
Edmund Jenks
Los Angeles, California, United States -
Uwe Paschen
Narita, Chiba, Japan










Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (9)
at 18:17 on February 11th, 2009
maybe one day we will have our own rings like saturn, except ours will be satellite debris.
at 18:29 on February 11th, 2009
I had not thought of that but it is very possible.
at 20:18 on February 11th, 2009
I remember those movies.
Very good.
We need James Bond Today.
at 07:07 on February 12th, 2009
Accident, or planned elimination of functional orbital assets?
Was this a test of a plan to reduce a nation's communication and technological capability?
at 07:41 on February 13th, 2009
All are possible.
at 10:33 on February 12th, 2009
It is like something out of a movie
at 07:43 on February 13th, 2009
Life imitating art?
at 19:43 on February 12th, 2009
This picture was taken from an airplane, on my way to Paris.
c4lin has contributed a photo to this story.
at 07:43 on February 13th, 2009
Thanks for the picture.