NASA's Mission Control woke the six astronauts on the station from their sleep late Friday as the space debris approached, but ultimately decided not to send the crew into their Soyuz spacecraft to ride out the orbital trash's near miss. The astronauts were told they could go back to sleep.
Sending the astronauts into their Soyuz lifeboats would have been a precaution only. Earlier today, NASA officials said the space junk posed no threat to the station or its crew, but news of its close approach came too late to steer the massive orbiting lab clear using its Russian thrusters.
That is exactly what happened. A closer analysis of the object by NASA Friday found it to be a small, 2-inch (5-cm) piece of space trash that would not hit the space station. "Good news," NASA's Mission Control told the station crew. "The tracking data has come through, and shown that the conjunction's no longer a threat to station."
"I'll get around to all my crewmembers here, and we can go back to sleep," replied station commander Frank De Winne, a Belgian astronaut representing the European Space Agency. "Thanks a lot for working all this tonight, Houston."
A close pass by an old rocket engine remnant sent three station astronauts into their Soyuz spacecraft earlier this year in March. Since then, however, the space station's crew size has doubled to six astronauts, so two Soyuz vehicles are currently docked to the station. NASA also delayed the departure of a Japanese cargo ship from the space station last week because of a space debris threat.
There is also a box-like buffer around the station that mission managers prefer to keep free of any debris. That safety zone extends about 15 miles (25 km) around the space station, as well as about a half-mile (0.75 km) above and below it. The station flies in an orbit about 220 miles (354 km) above Earth at a speed of about 17,500 mph (28,163 kph).
The collision between two communications satellites earlier this year brought the issue to the forefront. It, as well as China's intentional destruction of a satellite during a 2007 anti-satellite test, have sparked a renewed push to better track, and possibly reduce, the more than 20,000 pieces of space junk currently watched by various agencies.
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