A Japanese spacecraft has made a daring approach to a discarded rocket in Earth's orbit.
The roman homosexual eroticism engravingmission — undertaken by the satellite technology company Astroscale — intends to eventually remove the 36-foot-long spent rocket stage, but has first tested its ability to rendezvous with the problematic object (one of 27,000 space junk objects larger than 10 centimeters in orbit).
The pioneering space endeavor is called Active Debris Removal by Astroscale-Japan, or ADRAS-J.
"Ending 2024 with a historic approach!" Astroscale posted online. "Our ADRAS-J mission has achieved the closest ever approach by a commercial company to space debris, reaching just 15 meters [almost 50 feet] from a rocket upper stage."
SEE ALSO: NASA scientist viewed first Voyager images. What he saw gave him chills.This rocket stage, weighing three tons, is the upper part of the Japanese Space Exploration Agency's (JAXA) H2A rocket, which launched the Earth observation GOSAT satellite in 2009. The greater space debris removal mission is part of JAXA's "Commercial Removal of Debris Demonstration" project, which seeks a proven way to remove problematic space junk from orbit.
ADRAS-J previously flew around the hunk of discarded metal, capturing imagery and gathering data on the rocket's condition and motion. This latest and closest endeavor, achieved on Nov. 30, demonstrated the spacecraft's ability to operate precisely in such close range to the derelict rocket, a requirement for the future capture of the unwieldy, large object. An accident between large objects, moving at thousands of miles per hour, isn't acceptable: It would exacerbate the problem.
To complete this close-proximity endeavor, ADRAS-J moved from behind the rocket, approaching in a straight line from 50 meters (164 feet) away. The craft then stopped at 15 meters out from an even closer point. This mission had successes, but as is the norm for novel space missions, it didn't go entirely as planned. The craft didn't reach the point where a follow-up mission will actually capture the rocket stage.
"ADRAS-J successfully maintained this position until an autonomous abort was triggered by the onboard collision avoidance system due to an unexpected relative attitude anomaly with the upper stage," the company said. "The spacecraft safely maneuvered away from the debris as designed before reaching the Capture Initiation Point. Astroscale Japan is currently investigating the cause of the abort."
The space imaging and technology company HEO captured a view of the ADRAS-J spacecraft closing within 50 meters of the upper stage during this latest approach.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Additionally, the conceptual rendering below shows what this close approach likely looked like, and Astroscale has released previous images of the actual space junk target (also shown below).
The $82 million follow-up mission, ADRAS-J2, is expected to launch in 2028.
That spacecraft, currently under construction, will bring the rocket stage down to a lower orbit using a robotic arm. Eventually, it will largely burn up in Earth's atmosphere. In the future, the hope among spacefaring nations and commercial space interests is to keep low Earth orbit (LEO) largely clear of threatening space debris — especially inert craft that can't maneuver on their own.
"LEO is an orbital space junk yard," NASA explains. "There are millions of pieces of space junk flying in LEO. Most orbital debris comprises human-generated objects, such as pieces of spacecraft, tiny flecks of paint from a spacecraft, parts of rockets, satellites that are no longer working, or explosions of objects in orbit flying around in space at high speeds."
I’m Gonna Live Like a Human BeingDancing on a VolcanoBetween a Rock and a God PlaceVacuous ValorOmerta in FranceJosé Muñoz, Then and ThereSpecific DetailsAstronomers saw a long, bright space blast, but it wasn't a supernovaHow I Kill SoldiersWhy Read the Classics?A Fête Worse Than DeathWho Owns Vaccines?Arts and StatecraftA Theory of Thorstein VeblenDeath in the Mango OrchardLoose ChangeCastes of MindI Put a Spell on YouConsequences for Thee, Not for MeI Put a Spell on You In Victorian Novels, “Withholding Sex Is a Perverse Way of Having It” Ulysses S. Grant Repaired My Parents’ Dryer Evliya Çelebi’ Is One of History’s Great Storytellers On a Certain Epigram by Anna Akhmatova American Girl Night at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center Poem: Kate Ellen Braverman’s “Classified Ad” A Fan’s Notes: How Sports Taught Me to Think People Who Read Books Live Longer Sigalit Landau’s “Salt Bride” Submerges a Gown in the Dead Sea Porn Poetry Staff Picks: Eve Babitz, Jesse Ball, Erica Baum The Landlord from Ioway: James Alan McPherson, 1943–2016 Figs Have All the Answers Luc Sante: The Language of Dogs Long Gone and Missing: Paintings by Peyton Freiman Lou Pearlman and His Dream Bess Wohl’s play ‘Small Mouth Sounds’ returns to the stage. Jeff Koons’s Studio Squashes a Union Unconventional, Part 5: Terry Southern Takes on the Fakes Kool Customer: Hunter S. Thompson Sells Cigs in Puerto Rico
2.7709s , 10194.6484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【roman homosexual eroticism engraving】,Charm Information Network