Posted on 02/11/2009 1:39:00 PM PST by Names Ash Housewares
NOT GUILTY.
(hubba hubba)
When Steve Faucett’s body was found near the wreckage they moved that to chat also.
I guess there is less communicating going on today.
Too bad they don’t have one way orbits and speed limits.
Is it ‘bound to happen’? Sure, but over what time span? What are the odds that the number of satellites currently in space will have precisely the same altitude and will intersect with another’s orbit, at the same exact instant in time? How often would one expect one such an event? Maybe one was intentionally placed in the same orbit at some point, perhaps nefariously, and their relative closeness resulted in a collision, but I want someone smarter than me to calculate the probability and such before my suspicions will be put to rest that this is just a one in ? years event.
They’ve been trying for 12 years to knock out the Iridium constellation. Those are the telecom satelites that belong to Osama’s brother, that provide un trackable mobil phones anywhere in the world.
Is Putin testing Obama?
you can click and drag on the screen to change the attitude and rotation too
speeding it up makes it look like a swarm of angry bees...
You can see at around 1000km there is a lot of debris.
won’t the debris continue to spread out?
Someone set us up the bomb!
All your base...
Yup. One piece in 5,000 to 10,000 cubic Kilometers if I did my math right (hate to say I’m rusty with simple geometry, but it’s sort of like riding a bike).
The biggest pieces at that level might have the mass of a small car. If they stayed in one place it wouldn’t be much of a problem, but since they are moving at near 5 KM per second it’s a bit more so.
But as we like to say when we consider blowing the stop at a railroad crossing on a track that gets used maybe once a month, “astronomical” (perhaps the last word from the driver of a truck carrying a work crew that left the world of the living at that particular crossing).
‘You can see at around 1000km there is a lot of debris.’
And a hell of a lot of space at that altitude. I still say the odds of two satellites (not a couple of big clouds of debris, but objects that aren’t much more than a few cubic meters in size) intersecting the same point in space at exactly the same time has to be astronomically low (pun intended). I’ve tried to find the figure somewhere, but have had no success. Are they really that densely populated that we can expect a collision every 10 years or so? I bet some insurance actuary has done the calcs already, but inquiring minds want to know. All I have found thus far is ‘extremely unusual’ ‘low probability event’, etc.
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