• Home
  • Chemistry
  • Astronomy
  • Energy
  • Nature
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Electronics
  • Space Debris Captured by Satellite Harpoon in Successful Orbit-Cleanup Demonstration
    Space Debris Captured by Satellite Harpoon in Successful Orbit-Cleanup Demonstration

    This Feb. 8, 2019 image from video made available by the RemoveDEBRIS Consortium shows a harpoon striking a square target mounted 1.5 meters (5 feet) from the RemoveDEBRIS spacecraft. The same team used a net to capture a piece of space junk, in a test last September. (RemoveDEBRIS Consortium via AP)

    A harpoon flung from a satellite has successfully captured a piece of pretend space junk, like a whale.

    The British-led experiment is part of an effort to clean up debris in orbit.

    The University of Surrey's Guglielmo Aglietti said Friday that the steel-tipped harpoon scored a bull's-eye last Friday. The harpoon—no bigger than a writing pen—pierced an aluminum panel the size of a table tennis racket attached to the end of a satellite boom. The distance was just 5 feet ( 1.5 meters), but researchers were thrilled.

    The same team used a net to capture a piece of space junk, in a test last September.

    The experiment was released from the International Space Station last year.

    © 2019 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.




    Science Discoveries © www.scienceaq.com