... regulations, policy and standards. Both national governments and international organisations have recognised the risks posed by space debris and are considering solutions. Japan, the UK, ESA, European Union (EU) and the United States are considering...
...’s Chief Executive, “by catalysing investment, backing innovative new technologies and supporting a national mission to remove space debris, we can keep space open for future generations and protect the important satellite services that modern life...
... placed in GEO. In the future, such monitoring missions may help to provide warning of extreme space weather events generated by the Sun. Debris problem Fifty years of GEO operations has resulted in the presence of multiple defunct satellites and...
... of new small satellites to the 1000 or so active satellites already in low Earth orbit make the sustainable management of space debris more important than ever. In an attempt to address this, the MAAC research and development group, a Japan-based...
... in orbit in 1957, thousands of spacecraft, their associated transportation systems (spent rocket stages) and other related debris have entered the space domain. While many of these objects have either transited out of Earth orbit or re-entered Earth...
... Earth, only 2300 of which are functioning satellites. The remainder constitute the population normally known as space debris or space junk, a swarm of objects comprising anything from abandoned satellites and rocket upper stages to fragments from...