Texarkana Gazette

SPACE JUNK HARPOONED LIKE WHALE IN ORBIT-CLEANUP TEST

- By Marcia Dunn

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.—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, hundreds of miles above Earth.

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, but researcher­s were delighted.

A video shows the harpoon slamming into the target and knocking it off its perch, and then the harpoon cable becoming entangled around the boom.

Aglietti said a much bigger harpoon will be needed in order to snare a real dead satellite—“Moby Dick style.” Thousands of old satellite and rocket parts, and other junk circle Earth, a potential threat to working spacecraft, including the Internatio­nal Space Station.

The same team used a net to capture a piece of space junk in a test last September. And in December, they tracked a tiny satellite ejected from the mother ship, using lasers.

“We are very happy because so far, we have done three experiment­s and all three have been working,” Aglietti said by phone from England.

All that remains is for the 250-milehigh satellite to re-enter the atmosphere and burn up. If all goes according to plan, a sail will inflate in March and eventually drag the satellite down, its mission accomplish­ed.

Aglietti said the next step for the consortium, which includes Airbus, would be to offer this as a real service and go after real space debris.

The experiment was launched to the space station last April and released from the station last June.

 ?? RemoveDEBR­IS
Consortium ?? ■ This Feb. 8 image from video shows a harpoon striking a square target mounted 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 ■ This Feb. 8 image from video shows a harpoon striking a square target mounted 5 feet from the RemoveDEBR­IS spacecraft. The same team used a net to capture a piece of space junk in a test last September.

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