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 Elon Musk SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon

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PostSubject: Elon Musk SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon   Elon Musk SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon EmptyFri Jan 28, 2022 1:26 am

Elon Musk SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon
By Georgina Rannard
BBC News
Published1 day ago

A rocket launched by Elon Musk's space exploration company is on course to crash into the Moon and explode.

The Falcon 9 booster was launched in 2015 but after completing its mission, it did not have enough fuel to return towards Earth and instead remained in space.

Astronomer Jonathan McDowell told BBC News it will be the first known uncontrolled rocket collision with the Moon.

But the effects will be minor, he says.

The rocket was abandoned in high orbit seven years ago after it completed a mission to send a space weather satellite on a million-mile journey.

It was part of Mr Musk's space exploration programme SpaceX, a commercial company that ultimately aims to get humans living on other planets.

Since 2015 the rocket has been pulled by different gravitational forces of the Earth, Moon and Sun, making its path somewhat "chaotic", explains Prof McDowell from the US-based Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

"It's been dead - just following the laws of gravity."

It's joined millions of other pieces of space junk - machinery discarded in space after completing missions without enough energy to return to Earth.

"Over the decades there have been maybe 50 large objects that we've totally lost track of. This may have happened a bunch of times before, we just didn't notice. This would be the first confirmed case," Prof McDowell says.

Falcon 9's projected demise was identified by journalist Eric Berger on the space website Ars Technica and by data analyst Bill Gray in his blog.

The collision is due to happen on 4 March when the rocket will explode as it makes contact.

"It's basically a four-tonne empty metal tank, with a rocket engine on the back. And so if you imagine throwing that at a rock at 5,000 miles an hour, it's not going to be happy," Prof McDowell says.

It will leave a small artificial crater on the Moon's surface.

Bill Gray, who uses software to track near-Earth space objects, projects that it made a close fly-by on 5 January. On 4 March it's likely to hit the Moon's far side, he says.

In 2009 Prof McDowell and other astronomers performed an experiment in which a similar-sized rocket was crashed into the Moon. Sensors gathered evidence of the collision so they could study the crater.

That means scientists are unlikely to learn anything new from this crash, Prof McDowell explains.

He adds that while there are no consequences now to space debris left to drift and occasionally crash, there could be in the future.

"If we get into the future where there are cities and bases on the Moon, we want to know what's out there. It's much easier to get that organised when there is slow traffic in space, rather than waiting until it's a problem."

And what happens between now and 4 March? Well the rocket will continue to follow the laws of gravity, careering through space, before it ends its days smashing into the Moon.


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PostSubject: Re: Elon Musk SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon   Elon Musk SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon EmptySun Feb 13, 2022 5:43 am

Rocket on crash course with moon does not belong to SpaceX, report says
By Edmund DeMarche, Fox News
5 hours ago

The massive rocket speeding through space on a collision course with the moon does not belong to SpaceX despite earlier reports and likely belongs to a spacecraft launched by China in 2014, according to a report on Saturday.

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PostSubject: Re: Elon Musk SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon   Elon Musk SpaceX rocket on collision course with moon EmptyMon Feb 14, 2022 1:43 pm

Rocket part on crash course with Moon 'not from Elon Musk's SpaceX'
By Georgina Rannard
BBC News
Published4 hours ago

Astronomers say that a rocket section set to crash into the Moon in March did not come from Elon Musk's space exploration company as they first thought.

Instead they believe it is probably a Chinese rocket stage launched for a lunar mission in 2014.

The impact of the collision with the Moon will be minor, scientists say.

Astronomers first identified a piece of machinery on course to crash into the Moon on 4 March in January.

Machinery left in space that doesn't return to the Earth's atmosphere after completing missions is known as space junk.

Data analyst Bill Gray identified the object as a Falcon 9 booster from a 2015 launch by billionaire Elon Musk's space exploration programme SpaceX. It was subsequently reported by journalist Eric Berger. Mr Musk's company ultimately aims to get humans living on other planets.

But now Mr Gray says he made an error and instead he believes it is a rocket launched in October 2014 as part of China's Chang'e 5-T1 mission that sent a small spacecraft to the Moon.

Prof Jonathan McDowell from the US-based Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics told BBC News he agrees with Mr Gray's re-assessment. He explained that there is a lot of "intrinsic uncertainty" in identifying space debris far from Earth and that mistakes happen.

There are limited resources for tracking space debris, he explained: "We rely on a small handful of volunteers who do it on their own time. So there is limited scope for cross-checking."

Objects close to Earth are tracked by a team at the US military's Space Force, but junk further out in deep orbit is left unobserved.

The European Space Agency commented: "This still-evolving finding underscores the need for enhanced space tracking, and greater data sharing between spacecraft operators, launch providers and the astronomy and space surveillance communities."

Prof McDowell said he is 80% certain that the object on course to hit the Moon is from the 2014 Chinese rocket launch.

When the object was first identified, Prof McDowell told BBC News it will be the first known uncontrolled rocket collision with the Moon.

The rocket stage will explode as it makes contact.

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