Get the latest Science News and Discoveries

How Earthquake Detectors Track Space Junk


Thousands of pieces of abandoned spacecraft orbit Earth, and when gravity finally pulls them down, authorities rarely know exactly where they'll land. Now researchers at Johns Hopkins University have demonstrated a clever solution. Surprisingly they have found using earthquake detecting seismometers they can track falling space debris in real time by listening for the sonic booms it produces. The technique successfully traced a Chinese spacecraft module as it streaked across California at Mach 25-30, revealing its actual trajectory lay 25 miles north of predictions, a significant improvement that could help authorities quickly locate potentially toxic debris and protect people from contamination.

None

Get the Android app

Or read this on Universe Today

Read more on:

Photo of space junk

space junk

Photo of earthquake detectors

earthquake detectors

Related news:

News photo

Earthquake sensors can hear space junk falling to Earth

News photo

Earthquake sensors can track space junk that crashes back to Earth

News photo

Chinese Astronauts Return After a Delay Imposed by Space Junk