homehome Home chatchat Notifications


China's first space station is about to come crashing down on Earth, and we don't really know where

No reason to worry, just an 8-ton space station crashing down on Earth.

Mihai Andrei
October 18, 2017 @ 12:54 pm

share Share

But there’s really no reason to worry.

Image credits: China Manned Space Engineering.

We don’t really know when and we don’t really know where, but sometime in the next few months, the 8.5-ton Tiangong 1 space station will come crashing down — and it could land anywhere.

In September 2016, Chinese officials confirmed that they lost control of Tiangong 1 and estimated late 2017 as the atmosphere re-entry date. Their estimate seems to be pretty good, as the space lab zooms closer and closer to Earth. However, we won’t really know when it happens until, just several hours before re-entry. Naturally, that has a lot of people worried.

Tiangong’s re-entry date is currently estimated between October 2017 and April 2018. Its current altitude is about 370 kilometers (230 miles).

It’s not the first time something like this has happened. Previously, both NASA’s Skylab (1979) and the Soviet Salyut 7 (1991) crashed uncontrollably, and they were both bigger and more massive than the Tiangong 1. However, the situation certainly far from ideal. A controlled descent would allow engineers to direct the station towards a remote place where there’s no chance of it hitting anyone or anything; most likely, that would be the Oceanic Pole of Inaccessibility, a spacecraft “cemetery” some 3,000 miles off the eastern coast of New Zealand. But even so, Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics says that there’s not much reason to worry.

Going by some rudimentary math, the odds of it hitting something significant seem very small. Most of the space station will burn on reentry. Since the Earth is covered mostly by water (71%), that just leaves a paltry 29% of the surface as land. A 2008 study found that 95% of the planet’s population lives on just 10% of that land surface, making the odds of it hitting something important even slimmer. The chance of hitting isolated objects like ships or planes is astronomically slim. But ‘slim’ and ‘astronomical’ is not non-existent. A few pieces weighing up to 100 kilograms (220 pounds) might still survive the burn and reach Earth, and while unlikely, it’s not impossible for them to hit something or even someone. China told the United Nations that the lab would monitor Tiangong’s evolution closely though there’s not much they can do.

However, one thing’s for sure. So far, Tiangong has spent 2211 days above Earth, but its time seems limited.

Tiangong 1 was China’s first space station. It was intended more as a prototype, never meant to be permanent. It launched in 2011, to serve both as a manned experiment site and as a demonstration center for orbital rendezvous and docking capabilities. China intends to have a much larger, functional space station in orbit by 2023.

If you’re interested, you can follow Tiangong 1’s orbit yourself, using the live satellite tracking website N2YO.

share Share

This Rare Viking Burial of a Woman and Her Dog Shows That Grief and Love Haven’t Changed in a Thousand Years

The power of loyalty, in this life and the next.

This EV Battery Charges in 18 Seconds and It’s Already Street Legal

RML’s VarEVolt battery is blazing a trail for ultra-fast EV charging and hypercar performance.

DARPA Just Beamed Power Over 5 Miles Using Lasers and Used It To Make Popcorn

A record-breaking laser beam could redefine how we send power to the world's hardest places.

Why Do Some Birds Sing More at Dawn? It's More About Social Behavior Than The Environment

Study suggests birdsong patterns are driven more by social needs than acoustics.

Nonproducing Oil Wells May Be Emitting 7 Times More Methane Than We Thought

A study measured methane flow from more than 450 nonproducing wells across Canada, but thousands more remain unevaluated.

CAR T Breakthrough Therapy Doubles Survival Time for Deadly Stomach Cancer

Scientists finally figured out a way to take CAR-T cell therapy beyond blood.

The Sun Will Annihilate Earth in 5 Billion Years But Life Could Move to Jupiter's Icy Moon Europa

When the Sun turns into a Red Giant, Europa could be life's final hope in the solar system.

Ancient Roman ‘Fast Food’ Joint Served Fried Wild Songbirds to the Masses

Archaeologists uncover thrush bones in a Roman taberna, challenging elite-only food myths

A Man Lost His Voice to ALS. A Brain Implant Helped Him Sing Again

It's a stunning breakthrough for neuroprosthetics

This Plastic Dissolves in Seawater and Leaves Behind Zero Microplastics

Japanese scientists unveil a material that dissolves in hours in contact with salt, leaving no trace behind.