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    Another Dead Satellite to Fall From Space in November

    A defunct NASA satellite that fell to Earth last week sparked some worldwide buzz, but it's not the only spacecraft falling out of space.

    The decommissioned German X-ray space observatory, called the Roentgen Satellite or ROSAT, will tumble to Earth sometime in early November, but it's still too early to pinpoint exactly when and where debris from the satellite will land, according to officials at the German Aerospace Center.

    The 2.4-ton spacecraft's orbit extends from the latitudes of 53 degrees north and south, which means the satellite could fall anywhere over a huge swath of the planet — stretching from Canada to South America, German Aerospace officials said. [6 Biggest Uncontrolled Spacecraft Falls From Space]

    The latest estimates suggest that up to 30 large pieces of the satellite could survive the intense and scorching journey through Earth's atmosphere. In all, about 1.6 tons of the satellite components could reach the surface of the Earth, according to German Aerospace officials.

    The re-entry will be similar to NASA's 6-ton Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS), which plunged into the southern Pacific Ocean on Saturday (Sept. 24).

    ROSAT coming home

    In 1998, ROSAT's star tracker failed, which caused its onboard camera to be pointed directly at the sun. The event permanently damaged the spacecraft and ROSAT was officially decommissioned in February 1999.

    Scientists are actively tracking the dead satellite, but many of the details will remain uncertain until roughly two hours before it hits Earth.

    "It is not possible to accurately predict ROSAT's re-entry," Heiner Klinkrad, head of the Space Debris Office at the European Space Agency, said in a webcast posted on the German Aerospace Center's website. "The uncertainty will decrease as the moment of re-entry approaches. It will not be possible to make any kind of reliable forecast about where the satellite will actually come down until about one or two hours before the fact."

    It will, however, be possible to rule out certain geographical regions from the potential drop zone about a day in advance, Klinkrad said. The largest piece of debris is expected to be the telescope's heat resistant mirror.

    "Generally speaking, whenever a satellite re-enters the atmosphere, about 20 to 40 percent of its mass actually reaches the Earth’s surface," Klinkrad said. "In the case of ROSAT, this figure could be slightly higher because one of its characteristic features is that it carries heat-resistant mirror structures on board." [Related: Falling Satellites & Space Junk: Q&A with Orbital Debris Expert]

    Small risk to public

    Fragments from ROSAT could fall back to Earth over a 50-mile (80-kilometer) wide path, but despite the uncontrolled nature of ROSAT's re-entry, the odds of personal injury or property damage are extremely remote, German Aerospace officials said.

    When NASA's UARS satellite fell to Earth, for example, NASA said the chances of parts of the spacecraft striking any one of the nearly seven billion people on the planet were about 1 in 3,200. The actual personal risk of being hit for an individual person, however, was about 1 in several trillion, NASA officials said.

    To date, there have been no reported serious injuries or casualties from falling space debris, NASA scientists have said.

    You can follow SPACE.com staff writer Denise Chow on Twitter @denisechow. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    35 comments

    • whale with antennas  •  7 months ago
      No one thought, when the satellites were made, that they are going to fall?
    • Mathan  •  7 months ago
      Why don't the people who put the satellite in space think about ways to prevent such disasters. Even after the first crash into earth there should have been a more cautious way of thinking when putting the satilites in space.
    • dagwood  •  7 months ago
      Second chance for Ebay LOL
      • CDC 7 months ago
        That was a very funny comment!!!!1
    • Brenda  •  7 months ago
      Another wait and see where it falls when November gets here. UARS fell it the Pacific. I hope ROSAT lands in an ocean somewhere too. Just how many more satelites are there left that will be falling back to earth?
      • Motie 7 months ago
        Hundreds
      • USMC0341 7 months ago
        nasa seems to send one up every 2 weeks
      • drvr854 7 months ago
        Including boosters and other pieces it is probably closer to many thousands.
    • foreigner427  •  7 months ago
      I hope I survive satellitopalypse 2011.
    • mrknowitallme  •  7 months ago
      Lots of glass and ceramics on this baby. Should be a lot of souvenirs hitting the ground.
      • Kirstin 7 months ago
        The Bad Astronomer had a good article on it. (And no wonder; he's done work with ROSAT's data, so it has a little more personal meaning to him.) The mirrors are all heat-shielded to protect them from warping in space, and that will also protect them somewhat from reentry; though this spacecraft is less than half the mass of UARS, the estimated risk to people on the ground is higher because more stuff is liable to survive entry -- 1 in 2000.
    • d b  •  7 months ago
      if there is property damage, who do I sue? and since it is from Germany, I can keep the pieces.
      • Kirstin 7 months ago
        If they don't claim them, that's probably true.
      • mrknowitallme 7 months ago
        You don't want to sue the Germans. They know you have relatives living in America.
    • Firas Faham  •  7 months ago
      This is becoming a habit we better modify the National Building Codes to match the fall of Satellites and use shelters to protect people, just in case! How many Satellites out in space? Any one knows???
    • SCOTT T  •  7 months ago
      i think its aliens kids target practicing with their alien slingshots on our space junk. |:-D
    • Anderson M  •  7 months ago
      How does it look like? Need good clues
    • aboutblank  •  7 months ago
      Ahhhh, what goes up......uhhhhh, must come down.....somewherrrrrre.....
    • DAVID  •  7 months ago
      Justin Bieber's fault.
    • just me  •  7 months ago
      Hopefully it will land on my house and I can rebuild with the insurance!
    • anonymous  •  7 months ago
      We Call it..... The Chicken Little Effect... The Sky Is Falling......:)
    • DAVID  •  7 months ago
      Justin Bieber's fault...
      • mrknowitallme 7 months ago
        Can't wait until his 15 minutes burn up in the atmosphere of reality.
      • a a 7 months ago
        clever!
      • DAVID 7 months ago
        it always is
    • A Yahoo! User  •  7 months ago
      lots of stuff flying around up there,like Mcguiltys promises
    • Wandering Soul  •  7 months ago
      Geez, not again!
    • Hay U_Dair  •  7 months ago
      Dibs.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  7 months ago
      Hopefully this one will NOT miss the white house
    • Avelerion  •  7 months ago
      Get a space shuttle mount missiles on board and blast the shit away......!

      In 1995 the U.S. experimented placing weapons on space shuttles, however the U.N. was worried aliens if they were real would perceive us as a threat and the experiment was closed. they didn't want to take chances just in case they were real
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