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China’s Out-of-Control Rocket Booster Falls in the Pacific | China’s Out-of-Control Rocket Booster Falls in the Pacific |
(32 minutes later) | |
On Friday, a 23-ton center Chinese rocket stage tumbled back to Earth in the Pacific Ocean, the United States Space Command reported in a tweet on Friday morning. | |
That was a large piece of the Long March 5B rocket that launched a third and final module to complete its Tiangong space station. | |
And once again, that created some nervous sky-watching around the world as China’s rocket designers left it to chance where exactly the rocket stage would re-enter, scattering tons of metal pieces across the surface. | And once again, that created some nervous sky-watching around the world as China’s rocket designers left it to chance where exactly the rocket stage would re-enter, scattering tons of metal pieces across the surface. |
“Here we go again,” Ted Muelhaupt, a consultant for the Aerospace Corporation, a nonprofit group largely financed by the U.S. government that performs research and analysis, said in a news conference on Wednesday. | “Here we go again,” Ted Muelhaupt, a consultant for the Aerospace Corporation, a nonprofit group largely financed by the U.S. government that performs research and analysis, said in a news conference on Wednesday. |
The Long March 5B booster is not the only human-made object, or even the largest, to ever fall from space. And pieces of spacecraft from other countries, including the United States, have also fallen back to Earth recently — including a small piece of a SpaceX vehicle that turned up on an Australian sheep farm in August. | The Long March 5B booster is not the only human-made object, or even the largest, to ever fall from space. And pieces of spacecraft from other countries, including the United States, have also fallen back to Earth recently — including a small piece of a SpaceX vehicle that turned up on an Australian sheep farm in August. |
But Dr. Muelhaupt and other experts emphasize that such incidents differ from China’s use of the Long March 5B rocket. | But Dr. Muelhaupt and other experts emphasize that such incidents differ from China’s use of the Long March 5B rocket. |
“The thing I want to point out about this is that we, the world, don’t deliberately launch things this big intending them to fall wherever,” he said. “We haven’t done that for 50 years.” | “The thing I want to point out about this is that we, the world, don’t deliberately launch things this big intending them to fall wherever,” he said. “We haven’t done that for 50 years.” |
However, Zhao Lijian, a foreign ministry spokesman, on Friday rejected the notion that China’s handling of the Long March 5B rockets represented anything unusual. “I would like to stress that China has always carried out activities in the peaceful use of outer space in accordance with international law and international practice — re-entry of the last stage of a rocket is an international practice,” he said. | However, Zhao Lijian, a foreign ministry spokesman, on Friday rejected the notion that China’s handling of the Long March 5B rockets represented anything unusual. “I would like to stress that China has always carried out activities in the peaceful use of outer space in accordance with international law and international practice — re-entry of the last stage of a rocket is an international practice,” he said. |
Mr. Zhao added that the Long March 5B had been designed to pose less danger upon re-entry. The rocket “is designed with special technology; most of the components will burn up and be destroyed during the re-entry process, and the probability of causing harm to aviation activities and on the ground is extremely low,” he said. | Mr. Zhao added that the Long March 5B had been designed to pose less danger upon re-entry. The rocket “is designed with special technology; most of the components will burn up and be destroyed during the re-entry process, and the probability of causing harm to aviation activities and on the ground is extremely low,” he said. |
The China Manned Space Agency issued a statement in the final hours before the core booster crashed, providing the altitude of the perigee and apogee of the core’s decaying orbit, along with the inclination of the orbit. | The China Manned Space Agency issued a statement in the final hours before the core booster crashed, providing the altitude of the perigee and apogee of the core’s decaying orbit, along with the inclination of the orbit. |
It depended on where you live. | It depended on where you live. |
Because of the orientation of the orbit, if you live somewhere like Chicago or farther north — that includes almost all of Europe and all of Russia — the odds of being hit by this falling rocket were always zero. The last few orbits also completely missed Asia and South America, so no one on those two continents ever had to worry. | |
For people elsewhere, the chances of being hit were minuscule, although not quite zero. | For people elsewhere, the chances of being hit were minuscule, although not quite zero. |
“You’ve got far better odds of winning the lottery” than of being hit by part of the Chinese rocket, Dr. Muelhaupt said. “The risk to an individual is six per 10 trillion. That’s a really small number.” (That is, if 10 trillion Chinese Long March 5B rocket boosters fell out of the sky, six of them would hit you personally.) | “You’ve got far better odds of winning the lottery” than of being hit by part of the Chinese rocket, Dr. Muelhaupt said. “The risk to an individual is six per 10 trillion. That’s a really small number.” (That is, if 10 trillion Chinese Long March 5B rocket boosters fell out of the sky, six of them would hit you personally.) |
On Wednesday, he put the odds that all of the nearly eight billion people on Earth would survive unscathed at 99.5 percent. | On Wednesday, he put the odds that all of the nearly eight billion people on Earth would survive unscathed at 99.5 percent. |
But the 0.5 percent possibility that someone could have been injured or killed is “high enough that the world has to watch and prepare and take precautionary steps, and that has a cost, which is unnecessary,” Dr. Muelhaupt said. | But the 0.5 percent possibility that someone could have been injured or killed is “high enough that the world has to watch and prepare and take precautionary steps, and that has a cost, which is unnecessary,” Dr. Muelhaupt said. |
The Long March 5B consists of a large center booster and four smaller side boosters. The side boosters drop off shortly after launch, crashing harmlessly in the Pacific Ocean. But, by design, the core booster stage goes all the way to orbit before deploying its payload. | The Long March 5B consists of a large center booster and four smaller side boosters. The side boosters drop off shortly after launch, crashing harmlessly in the Pacific Ocean. But, by design, the core booster stage goes all the way to orbit before deploying its payload. |
For this mission, the rocket carried Mengtian, a science laboratory module, for the Chinese space station, Tiangong. | For this mission, the rocket carried Mengtian, a science laboratory module, for the Chinese space station, Tiangong. |
Mengtian docked to China’s orbital outpost on Tuesday. Tiangong, designed to last at least 10 years, is not as big as the International Space Station — it is more comparable in size to the Russian Mir space station that orbited from 1986 to 2001. But it will establish a more permanent base in space than China’s earlier space stations, and more than 1,000 scientific experiments are planned for it in the years to come. | Mengtian docked to China’s orbital outpost on Tuesday. Tiangong, designed to last at least 10 years, is not as big as the International Space Station — it is more comparable in size to the Russian Mir space station that orbited from 1986 to 2001. But it will establish a more permanent base in space than China’s earlier space stations, and more than 1,000 scientific experiments are planned for it in the years to come. |
The Chinese rocket engineers who designed the Long March 5B did not include any way to guide the spent core booster to an empty part of an ocean. | The Chinese rocket engineers who designed the Long March 5B did not include any way to guide the spent core booster to an empty part of an ocean. |
Instead, the booster gradually falls as it rubs against the wisps of the upper atmosphere. How fast it falls depends on the air density. That varies, because the Earth’s atmosphere puffs outward when the sun is active, spewing out more charged particles, and contracts when the sun is quieter. | Instead, the booster gradually falls as it rubs against the wisps of the upper atmosphere. How fast it falls depends on the air density. That varies, because the Earth’s atmosphere puffs outward when the sun is active, spewing out more charged particles, and contracts when the sun is quieter. |
Two of the three previous launches of the Long March 5B — one of the most powerful rockets in operation today — ended with large chunks of metal landing near populated areas. Although no one has been injured, the proximity illustrated the dangers. | Two of the three previous launches of the Long March 5B — one of the most powerful rockets in operation today — ended with large chunks of metal landing near populated areas. Although no one has been injured, the proximity illustrated the dangers. |
For the first launch of the rocket, in 2020, the booster made an uncontrolled re-entry over West Africa, with some debris landing on a village in Ivory Coast. After the third launch, in July, the uncontrolled re-entry occurred over Southeast Asia, with pieces landing in Malaysia. | For the first launch of the rocket, in 2020, the booster made an uncontrolled re-entry over West Africa, with some debris landing on a village in Ivory Coast. After the third launch, in July, the uncontrolled re-entry occurred over Southeast Asia, with pieces landing in Malaysia. |
“Again, big chunks of metal have come down near where people are,” Dr. Muelhaupt said. | “Again, big chunks of metal have come down near where people are,” Dr. Muelhaupt said. |
He said there was no indication that China had made any of the significant modifications to the rocket design that would be needed for a controlled re-entry. | He said there was no indication that China had made any of the significant modifications to the rocket design that would be needed for a controlled re-entry. |
China has at least one more Long March 5B launch planned, for next year, to put in orbit a space telescope, Xuntian, that would rival NASA’s Hubble space telescope. | China has at least one more Long March 5B launch planned, for next year, to put in orbit a space telescope, Xuntian, that would rival NASA’s Hubble space telescope. |
And it is probable that debris from American rockets and spacecraft will turn up on land again, too, like the SpaceX vehicle part found in Australia. | And it is probable that debris from American rockets and spacecraft will turn up on land again, too, like the SpaceX vehicle part found in Australia. |
But there is little need to worry about the upcoming flight of NASA’s massive moon rocket, the Space Launch System, the agency says. The S.L.S., the biggest rocket to fly since the Saturn V used for the Apollo missions, is scheduled to make its first flight later this month. Its center core stage travels almost all the way to orbit, but NASA officials said on Thursday that its trajectory was designed to re-enter not long after launch in a specific unpopulated area. | But there is little need to worry about the upcoming flight of NASA’s massive moon rocket, the Space Launch System, the agency says. The S.L.S., the biggest rocket to fly since the Saturn V used for the Apollo missions, is scheduled to make its first flight later this month. Its center core stage travels almost all the way to orbit, but NASA officials said on Thursday that its trajectory was designed to re-enter not long after launch in a specific unpopulated area. |
“It’s in an area of the ocean where it won’t affect anyone,” said James Free, the associate administrator for exploration systems at NASA. | “It’s in an area of the ocean where it won’t affect anyone,” said James Free, the associate administrator for exploration systems at NASA. |
Keith Bradsher contributed reporting, and Li You contributed research. | Keith Bradsher contributed reporting, and Li You contributed research. |