首页
登录
职称英语
Watch out for Falling Satellites What Is Happening?
Watch out for Falling Satellites What Is Happening?
游客
2024-02-12
42
管理
问题
Watch out for Falling Satellites
What Is Happening?
An out-of-control US spy satellite will crash to Earth in the coming months, government officials say. The satellite is large enough that debris are likely to survive atmospheric re-entry and strike the Earth, sometime in late February or early March, says Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the National Security Council.
Is That Normal?
"This is relatively routine in that satellites deorbit all the time," says Johndroe. Pieces of uncontrolled debris heavier than two stones — mostly discarded rocket stages — crash to Earth as often as once every three weeks, says Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer and launch observer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Many discarded pieces retain some power, so that controllers on Earth can guide them to a point far from human habitation, usually using a final dive into an ocean.
In 2001, Russian space officials broke up the old Mir space station in this way over the South Pacific. That’s not the case for this US one, however.
"Obviously, we want to take a look at the potential for it to land in a populated area," says Johndroe. "As background, I’d like to say that over the past 30 plus years, there have been many satellites and other man-made objects falling from space — of course, they falling with very little damage and no injuries. What makes this case a little bit different, however, and in particular for the president in his consideration, was the likelihood that the satellite, upon descent to the Earth’s surface, could release much of its thousand-plus pounds of hydrazine fuel as a toxic gas. "
What Are the Chances of It Crashing Through My Roof?
Exceedingly slim, says McDowell. Remember that some 70% of the Earth is water, and most lands are void of people. "There is no reason for people to get alarmed about it," he says. According to the NASA Orbital Debris Program Office, there have been no confirmed instances of serious property damage or injury caused by crashing debris in 40 years. The likelihood of the satellite falling in a populated area is small, and the extent and duration of toxic hydrazine in the atmosphere would be quite limited; nevertheless, if the satellite did fall in a populated area, there was a possibility of death or injury to human beings beyond that associated with the fall of satellites and other space objects normally, if we can use that word. Specifically, there was enough of a risk for the president to be quite concerned about human life, and on that basis, he asks us to review our options.
What Is This Satellite?
Since it is a spy satellite, this isn’t public information. But it is likely to be USA 193, which, according to news reports, was launched at the end of 2006 for the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) and which was lost to ground-based controllers upon reaching orbit. At the time, amateur sky watchers noticed that its orbit was slightly off and wasn’t being corrected. Based on the slight losses in altitude, they had predicted an eventual crash this spring, McDowell says.
If the dying satellite is indeed USA 193, its specifications can be better defined. USA 193 was launched on a Boeing Delta 2 rocket, which limits the size of the satellite to between two and four tonnes and five or six meters in length — about the size of a minivan, McDowell says. This satellite is now at an altitude of 250 kilometers and is falling a kilometer per day. It orbits in the mid-latitudes, between 58 degrees north and south. Where it will fall within that range is impossible to know now, so McDowell says the chance of landing in the United States, for example, is 2%, based on area. Better estimates should be available a day before landing.
Is the "Minivan-sized" Satellite a Big One?
Nowhere near as big as a satellite that fell uncontrollably in 1979: the more-than-70-tonne US Skylab I crashed through the atmosphere and scattered debris across the Indian Ocean and Western Australia.
What Will Happen to This One on Entry?
The atmosphere will tear up the satellite. Aluminum parts and outer layers will burn. Twisted chunks of heavier pieces, like the fuel tank, could survive. McDowell says that the satellite could contain as much as a tonne of hydrazine, a highly toxic propellant which could be hazardous to be near but not dangerous when dispersed in the atmosphere.
Have Bits of Satellites Survived Re-entry Intact Before?
Yes. The NASA Orbital Debris Program Office hosts some pictures of pretty big chunks, including: a 250-kilogram steel fuel tank and a 30-kilogram titanium tank of a launch vehicle that both landed in Texas in 1997, and a 70-kilogram titanium rocket motor casing that landed in Saudi Arabia in 2001. One noteworthy ill-fated satellite actually crash — landed through the roof of a workshop supporting its launch in 2006, having fallen from a botched take-off.
How Many Things Are There That Could Potentially Fall Out of Orbit?
Yes. NASA Orbital Debris Program Office says there are some 11,000 objects bigger than 10 centimeters tracked by the US Space Surveillance Network. Of course, the biggest man-made object in the sky, by far, is the International Space Station. Nearly 45 meters long and more than 200 tones heavy, the concern about the ISS is in protecting it from debris, rather than worrying about it becoming debris itself.
If It Lands in the Middle of Nowhere, does It Matter?
While the impact is likely to be a nonevent, the falling satellite does serve as a reminder that the NRO — the United States "eyes and ears in space" — is having a bad time of things. In 2005, the NRO cancelled a next-generation reconnaissance technology project, called Future Imagery Architecture, after Boeing had spent more than $ 4 billion on it, according to the New York Times. "The NRO has had a bad decade," says Jeffrey Lewis, a space policy analyst at the New America Foundation in Washington DC. "We knew this satellite has been dead for a long time. But it reminds us of how much trouble they’ve had." [br] According to McDowell, the propellant of USA 193 satellite could lose its toxicity when it is______.
选项
答案
dispersed in the atmosphere
解析
定位原文提到,McDowell说这枚卫星的燃料在接近时是有毒性的,但是当在空气中扩散开时就没有危险性了。题目中的lose its toxicity是对原文“失去毒性”的意思的概括,因此正确答案是dispersed in the atmosphere。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3443906.html
相关试题推荐
WatchoutforFallingSatellitesWhatIsHappening?
WatchoutforFallingSatellitesWhatIsHappening?
WatchoutforFallingSatellitesWhatIsHappening?
WatchoutforFallingSatellitesWhatIsHappening?
WatchoutforFallingSatellitesWhatIsHappening?
WatchoutforFallingSatellitesWhatIsHappening?
WatchoutforFallingSatellitesWhatIsHappening?
WatchoutforFallingSatellitesWhatIsHappening?
WatchoutforFallingSatellitesWhatIsHappening?
Pennyjumpedoutofthewayto______beinghitbythefallingbranch.A、preventB
随机试题
[originaltext]M:Idon’tunderstandit.(1)IgotanoticefromthebankthatI
[originaltext]Lasttimeweweretalkingabouttheneedforadvertising.Now
A.放射治疗 B.肿瘤切除术 C.局部病灶内注入甲泼尼龙 D.切刮、植骨、
药品广告的审批部门是A.国务院药品监督管理部门B.省级药品监督管理部门C.县级以
梅毒的病原体是()。A.奈瑟菌 B.钩端螺旋体 C.苍白螺旋体 D.汉坦
A. B. C. D.
邓小平曾指出:“关于民主,我们大陆讲社会主义民主,和资产阶级民主的概不同。西方的
可增强下丘脑-垂体-性腺轴功能的药物有A.鹿茸 B.紫河车 C.淫羊藿 D
A证券的期望报酬率为12%,标准差为15%;B证券的期望报酬率为18%,标准差为
(2018年真题)某房间多为开间3m,进深6m的四层办公楼常用的结构形式为( )
最新回复
(
0
)