Earthquake sensors can detect sonic booms generated by reentering space debris to help track the potentially dangerous ...
When Sir Keir Starmer left for Beijing earlier this week, he probably didn’t imagine that a Chinese rocket would be ...
Space debris—the thousands of pieces of human-made objects abandoned in Earth's orbit—pose a risk to humans when they fall to the ground. To locate possible crash sites, a Johns Hopkins University ...
Space debris entering the Earth’s atmosphere moves faster than the speed of sound and it's hard to predict where it will crash. The post New way to track deadly space junk falling to Earth developed ...
Scientists found a new way to track falling space debris using earthquake sensors, helping improve safety and response time.
Falling space junk is becoming a real-world hazard, and scientists have found a clever new way to track it using instruments ...
Earthquake sensors are giving scientists a new way to track space junk as it falls back to Earth.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Lead image: Christoph Burgstedt / Shutterstock (Space debris from defective satellite due to orbital collisions. Credit: Christoph ...
Networks of seismometers pick up on vibrations of debris to map their trajectory on Earth.
Now, scientists have devised a clever new way to predict where the pieces may land.
Now from airplanes to outer space. We have news of three Chinese astronauts who are finally back on Earth. They'd had to extend their stay on China's space station by more than a week due to space ...