Scientists tracked falling space junk by listening for the sonic boom it made as it tore through the atmosphere. It could be a way to better monitor objects from space as the number of satellites skyrockets.

https://xclaims.substack.com/p/when-space-junk-goes-sonic-boom

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  1. jonnywithoutanh on

    The number of satellites has grown from 3,000 just five years ago to more than 14,000 today, mostly driven by SpaceX’s Starlink mega constellation which makes up 65% of all satellites. One or two satellites re-enter our atmopshere EVERY DAY, but it’s hard to track where these things are falling. Sonic booms could be an answer – scientists used them to track a piece of falling Chinese space debris two years ago, and say we could use the technique to monitor other falling objects in the future across the globe.