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    Switzerland Plans 'Janitor Satellite' to Clean Up Space Junk

    Earth is surrounded by a cloud of more than half a million pieces of space junk, from bus-size spent rocket stages to tiny flecks of paint. Orbiting at breakneck speeds, every last bit poses grave dangers — and means huge insurance premiums — for operational satellites, and it threatens the International Space Station, too. Every time two orbiting objects collide, they break up into thousands more pieces of debris.

    To combat this growing headache, Swiss scientists and engineers have come up with a solution: CleanSpace One, a project to build the first in a family of so-called "janitor satellites" that will help clean up space. The prototype space junk cleaner will be a rectangular satellite nearly 12 inches (30 centimeters) long and about 4 inches (10 cm) tall and wide.

    Slated to launch as early as 2015, CleanSpace One will rendezvous with one of two defunct objects in orbit, either the Swisscube picosatellite or its cousin TIsat, both 61 cubic inches (1,000 cubic cm) in size. When the janitor satellite reaches its target, it will extend a grappling arm, grab it and then plunge into Earth’s atmosphere, burning up itself and the space junk during re-entry.

    CleanSpace One is being designed and built at the Swiss Space Center, part of the Swiss Federal Institute for Technology in Lausanne, or EPFL. Scientists there are developing the micro- and electric propulsion systems that will enable CleanSpace One to grab hold of space junk as the two objects zip around Earth at 17,500 mph (28,000 kph). [Video and images of CleanSpace One mission]

    "The [main] challenge will be having a deployment either of a robotic arm or a deployment of a mechanism that will embrace or grab exactly Swisscube," EPFL scientist Muriel Richard said in a press video. The design team is drawing inspiration from the grabbing mechanisms of living organisms, she said.

    Eventually, the team hopes to offer and sell a whole suite of ready-made systems designed to de-orbit space junk of various sizes "Space agencies are increasingly finding it necessary to take into consideration and prepare for the elimination of the stuff they're sending into space. We want to be the pioneers in this area," Swiss Space Center Director Volker Gass said.

    Smaller systems like CleanSpace One will be low-cost, Richard said. "It's not a multimillion development, it’s a university based development."

    There may indeed be a market for such janitor satellites.

    In 2009, the American Iridium satellite collided with debris from an inactive Russian satellite, producing roughly 2,000 more pieces of debris, some of which went on to destroy a satellite worth $55 million. The more junk accumulates, the more likely collisions between satellites and debris will become, with each collision causing a proliferation of debris.

     "There’s going to be an avalanche effect and more and more satellites are going to be kicked out or destroyed in orbit," Gass said. Higher risk of impact means higher space junk insurance premiums, and the cost of insuring today’s active satellites is around $20 billion.

    Falling space debris even poses a slight risk of injuring people on Earth.

    Claude Nicollier, an astronaut and EPFL professor, compared the space junk problem with global warming. "In a way, there’s some similarity between the two problems," he said. "If we don't do anything, we’ll have big problems in the future."

    This story was provided by Life's Little Mysteries, a sister site to SPACE.com. You can follow Life's Little Mysteries on Twitter (@LLMysteries) and on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    34 comments

    • luke  •  3 months ago
      #$%$ those Swiss. Always being neutral and helpful!
    • m s  •  3 months ago
      Is it time for a space scooter, a small manned rocket capable of [1] working from the space station for a few days, [2] being re-fueled from the space station, [3] locating and capturing space debris, and [4] pushing debris toward the earth or the sun to burn up?
      • Terry 3 months ago
        That's a great idea. Too bad you're not in the space industry. Now someone will (eventually) steal your idea and make millions. Honestly, good idea. It would, however need some pretty heavy-duty armour itself. Wouldn't want an astronaut to get killed by a high-speed paint chip trying to push a dead satelite into the atmosphere. We had a rover on the moon, this sounds like a logical step to me. A larger and more powerful version of the device used in some of the first space walks. I know they've come a long way since then, but what you're proposing is a giant leap ahead. Wonder why no one has thought of it before?
      • Terry 3 months ago
        Sure, we've polluted our own panet, why not pollute the rest of the galaxy? We put it there, we need to clean it up and not push it off on our "neighbors".
        Send it off into space. It's found (eventually) by an alien civilization. What do you think they'd think of Earthlings? Bad message to send whether someone gets it or not.
      • John 3 months ago
        I want one...
    • bobby  •  Climax, United States  •  3 months ago
      The US Iridium satellite didn't collide with debris from the Soviet satellite, but with the satellite itself. Meanwhile, China blew up its satellite with a rocket on purpose, creating thousands of pieces of junk -- ask them to clean it up.
      • Terry 3 months ago
        I agree. It should be a multi-national effort just as the ISS is. Although a country like China must take responsibility for therir obvious mistake and clean up the mess. Humans need to learn to clean up after themselves or we're going to pollute ourselves right out of the solar system.
      • luke 3 months ago
        China won't even clean up their own country. Do you really think they'd give a #$%$ about space?
      • Enzo 3 months ago
        they would just dump it in the ocean!
    • Chris  •  3 months ago
      Could a high power laser knock space debris into the earth?
      • Terry 3 months ago
        Maybe away from the Earth. But do we want to just push our junk deeper into space? Just because the galaxy is big that's no reason to pollute it the way we've already done our own planet and the space immediately around it. I think a laser would just blast a dead satelite into smaller pieces exacerbating the situation.
      • Robert 3 months ago
        it would have to be a type of tractor beam , if they could make one of those the problem would be solved !
      • John 3 months ago
        No, because light has almost no impulse and this space junk is in orbit (i.e., under the influence of gravity). However, it could certainly burn the junk up.
    • m  •  3 months ago
      It is great that someone is stepping up to the problem.
      • jer 3 months ago
        They fooled you!
    • electropath  •  Seoul, South Korea  •  3 months ago
      OK, if no one else did, I have to say it. Whaddaya call a satellite that cleans space?

      ...a "vacuum cleaner"!
      • Jessica 3 months ago
        Hahaha.... nice!!
      • Jeff 3 months ago
        Awesome! You win the prize!
      • Nodor 3 months ago
        Um...come 2015 you'll call it CleanSpace One.
        Didn't you read the article?
    • Nodor  •  Sacramento, United States  •  3 months ago
      Why not make CleanSpace One a little larger and more advanced...so rather than grab a dead satelite and plunge into orbit, killing itself in the process...you program it to 'hunt' assigned satelites and just throw them down into the atmosphere?
      Two or three of these floating around up there being assigned satelites to 'hunt' and it would be a LOT cleaner up there in just a few years.

      Just a thought...
    • Bill  •  3 months ago
      About time the Swiss contribute to society, besides the Nobel Prise which they ruined, and bad banking procedures.
    • Kirstin  •  3 months ago
      Cool! This has the potential to actually work in the near term, and with such a small bus size, they can easily piggyback on other launches. The main limiting factor for "janitor satellite" concepts has always been the cost of getting them up in the first place.
    • The first Brevityn  •  3 months ago
      Just another part of the Swiss master plan.
      They have been planning to take over the world now for over a century.
      It's all so obvious.
    • steph  •  Bellevue, United States  •  3 months ago
      they should have called it the Wall-e 1 lol
    • Rick Wainscott  •  3 months ago
      Thank goodness a country is finally cleaning up something. If only we could get countries to clean up the earth more. Fresh water and plenty of plant AND animal life is important to us all.
    • norm  •  Englewood, United States  •  3 months ago
      One small problem from man and one big problem for mankind.
    • Bryan  •  Pittsburgh, United States  •  3 months ago
      if we can make a zoomba that can do all this, why cant scientists make something of the same for space?
    • Charles  •  Wentzville, United States  •  3 months ago
      The Swiss should stick to cheese...
    • Arbutus Dave  •  3 months ago
      The Swiss are so anal.
    • Karl  •  3 months ago
      Wait a minute, there's such a thing as satellite insurance?
    • Bruce  •  3 months ago
      SO they're planning on sending up a 12x4x4 inch satellite on a rocket, thus leaving a bus-size spent rocket stage in orbit to pick up a 61 cubic inch (I'd guess... less than 4x4x4 inch) satellite. Maybe 0bama supporters think this is progress, but to the rest of us, you're replacing a tiny piece of junk with a much MUCH bigger one!
    • Jessica  •  Romeoville, United States  •  3 months ago
      You have any idea how many of these vacuum cleaners it will take to make even a minor impact in a reasonable amount of time? It took the space shuttle 3 days to dock with the ISS after launch at an altitude of 220 miles... an it took hundreds of people to actually fly it, on the ground and in the craft. There is no way anyone can build a spacecraft that will do anything sigificant that won't cost so much to do per peice of crap that they will keep doing longer than the intitial flight of saying "It can be done."
      I'm not a pessimist... it is reality people. Money vs result. Will never happen.
    • Barney Rubble  •  3 months ago
      Interesting proposal. Put a crew in orbit in charge of this, and it takes the job of garbage collection to a whole new level, and no pun intended.
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