| General > General Technical Chat |
| we need traffic lights for satellites |
| << < (10/17) > >> |
| Lord of nothing:
--- Quote ---Satellite will deorbit by itself in a time of a few years --- End quote --- Which Upcomming Space Company want to wait "a few years" until there is space for them? Here in Europe we saw it with the Scooter. A Company shut down at Friday and declare bankruptcy and the City had to remove on there own cost all useless Scooter. Lets say Space X when out of Business or sell there Sat (on the Paper) and that Company went down who feel capable of that junk? --- Quote ---Nobody in sane mind will fly to collect garbage from space with current technology available. --- End quote --- Thats why we must force them to think about that FIRST and than permit them to launch a huge amount of Sat who will be up for --- Quote ---few years --- End quote --- . Maybe its the "European way" of think about sub stability. |
| wraper:
--- Quote from: Lord of nothing on July 31, 2020, 09:48:55 pm --- --- Quote ---Satellite will deorbit by itself in a time of a few years --- End quote --- Which Upcomming Space Company want to wait "a few years" until there is space for them? --- End quote --- LOL? :-DD |O :palm: :wtf: There is no "space" of deorbiting sattelite new company needs to wait for. Nor that "exact spot" will be given to any other company to begin with. Not to say that decaying satellite gradually lowers it's orbit. I started doubting your sanity. It's not like any satellite is obstructing anyone. There is a lot of free space. The concern it that satellites on different orbits may collide in some circumstances and as they travel at extremely high speed create a lot of widespread debris clouds which then may hit other satellites. My suggestion is go read some stuff about what the space is, how things work there and don't embarrass yourself further. |
| madires:
Launch windows will have to become tighter and the operational part be will be harder too, especially if some satellites aren't there where they should be according to the database. |
| rdl:
There's only going to be about one satellite for every five thousand square kilometers or so. |
| madires:
About 3% of Starlink satellites have failed so far: https://phys.org/news/2020-10-starlink-satellites.html |
| Navigation |
| Message Index |
| Next page |
| Previous page |