- Posts: 9640
- Thank you received: 547
Iridium Flares
- Seanie_Morris
- Offline
- Administrator
Less
More
16 years 9 months ago #64907
by Seanie_Morris
You've got to be kidding! Surely those numbers need to be clarified a bit? I mean, about 2/3 of the stuff known to be orbiting Earth must my rocket parts and so on, not classical 'satellites' I would have assumed.
Seanie.
Midlands Astronomy Club.
Radio Presenter (Midlands 103), Space Enthusiast, Astronomy Outreach Co-ordinator.
Former IFAS Chairperson and Secretary.
Replied by Seanie_Morris on topic Re: Iridium Flares
over 8700 satellites orbiting the earth, and over 16,000 in a state of decay.
You've got to be kidding! Surely those numbers need to be clarified a bit? I mean, about 2/3 of the stuff known to be orbiting Earth must my rocket parts and so on, not classical 'satellites' I would have assumed.
Seanie.
Midlands Astronomy Club.
Radio Presenter (Midlands 103), Space Enthusiast, Astronomy Outreach Co-ordinator.
Former IFAS Chairperson and Secretary.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Euronymous
- Offline
- Main Sequence
Less
More
- Posts: 129
- Thank you received: 0
16 years 9 months ago #64930
by Euronymous
It is from the NASA Satellite Situation Report 1997, and is just "man made objects", which classify as satellites. So it would include rocket parts if they are in orbit, as they then become satellites of earth.
Celestron C8-N (200mm reflector)
Carl Zeiss 10x50's
-Amateur Astronomer, photographer, guitarist, and beer drinker-
Replied by Euronymous on topic Re: Iridium Flares
over 8700 satellites orbiting the earth, and over 16,000 in a state of decay.
You've got to be kidding! Surely those numbers need to be clarified a bit? I mean, about 2/3 of the stuff known to be orbiting Earth must my rocket parts and so on, not classical 'satellites' I would have assumed.
Seanie.
It is from the NASA Satellite Situation Report 1997, and is just "man made objects", which classify as satellites. So it would include rocket parts if they are in orbit, as they then become satellites of earth.
Celestron C8-N (200mm reflector)
Carl Zeiss 10x50's
-Amateur Astronomer, photographer, guitarist, and beer drinker-
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Moderators: Neill
Time to create page: 0.109 seconds