FacebookInstagramTwitterContact

 

Tiktok Says Cuddling Cows Is ‘Therapeutic’ But My Experience Certainly Wasn’t           >>           Flight Attendant Slams ‘Disturbing’ Plane Habit That Leaves You Covered In Pee           >>           Megan Fox And Machine Gun Kelly Slow Dance At Stagecoach Festival           >>           Prince Harry Returning To The U.K. 3 Months After Visiting King Charles III           >>           Getir is getting out of everywhere but Turkey           >>           Openai Hit With Another Privacy Complaint Over Chatgpt’s Love Of Making Stuff Up           >>           Gaza War: US 'Hopeful' Hamas Will Accept Israel's New Ceasefire Offer           >>           Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez Will Not Resign After Allegations Against Wife           >>           What Do Student Protesters At US Universities Want?           >>           Burkina Faso Bans More Foreign Media Over Human Rights Watch Massacre Report           >>          

 

SHARE THIS ARTICLE




REACH US


GENERAL INQUIRY

[email protected]

 

ADVERTISING

[email protected]

 

PRESS RELEASE

[email protected]

 

HOTLINE

+673 222-0178 [Office Hour]

+673 223-6740 [Fax]

 



Upcoming Events





Prayer Times


The prayer times for Brunei-Muara and Temburong districts. For Tutong add 1 minute and for Belait add 3 minutes.


Imsak

: 05:01 AM

Subuh

: 05:11 AM

Syuruk

: 06:29 AM

Doha

: 06:51 AM

Zohor

: 12:32 PM

Asar

: 03:44 PM

Maghrib

: 06:32 PM

Isyak

: 07:42 PM

 



The Business Directory


 

 



Asia


  Home > Asia


Long March 5B: Debris From Chinese Rocket Falls Back To Earth


GETTY IMAGES | The rocket lifting off from southern China on July 24, 2022

 


 July 31st, 2022  |  11:28 AM  |   564 views

CHINA

 

Chinese rocket debris has crashed to Earth over the Indian and Pacific oceans, US and Chinese officials say.

 

China's space agency said most remains of the Long March 5 burnt in the atmosphere, identifying the Sulu Sea in the Pacific as the re-entry location.

 

Earlier, space experts had said the probability of the rocket landing in a populated area was extremely low.

 

The uncontrolled return of rocket's core stage has raised questions about responsibility for space junk.

 

There have previously been calls by Nasa for the Chinese space agency to design rockets to disintegrate into smaller pieces upon re-entry, as is the international norm.

 

In a tweet, the US Space Command said the Long March 5 "re-entered over the Indian Ocean at approx 10:45 am MDT [16:45 GMT] on 7/30".

 

It referred its readers to the Chinese authorities for more details.

 

Meanwhile, China's space agency gave re-entry co-ordinates as 119 degrees East longitude and 9.1 degrees North latitude. This corresponds to an area in the Sulu Sea - east of the Philippine island of Palawan in the north Pacific.

 

Recent rockets heading to China's unfinished space station, known as Tiangong, have lacked the capability for a controlled re-entry.

 

The latest launch was last Sunday, when the Long March 5 rocket carried a lab module to the Tiangong station. The Chinese government said on Wednesday that the rocket's re-entry would pose little risk to anyone on the ground because it would most likely land in the sea.

 

However, there was the possibility for pieces of the rocket to come down over a populated area, as they did in May 2020 when properties in Ivory Coast were damaged.

 

Before crashing, the empty rocket body was in an elliptical orbit around Earth where it was being dragged toward an uncontrolled re-entry.

 

Designing objects to disintegrate upon atmospheric re-entry is becoming a priority for satellite operators. It's done partly by using materials which have low-melting point temperatures, such as aluminium.

 

In the case of rockets, this can be expensive, as historically the materials used for housing fuel, such as titanium, require very high temperatures to burn up. The sheer size of such objects is also an issue, especially in the case of the Long March 5, weighing over 25 tonnes.

 

The same Long March 5 configuration has launched twice before, once in May 2020 and again in May 2021, carrying different elements of the Tiangong station.

 

On both occasions debris from the rocket's "core stage" were dumped back on Earth, in Ivory Coast and the Indian Ocean. These followed a prototype that crashed into the Pacific Ocean back in 2018.

 

None of these incidents caused injury but did garner criticism from a range of space agencies. On Tuesday, Chinese state-run newspaper Global Times accused Western media of a US-led smear campaign against the Long March 5.

 

This latest launch carried the second of three modules to China's space station. The Wentian lab module at 17.9m in length will be the first of two labs to join the station. China began constructing the space station in April 2021 with the launch of the Tianhe module, the main living quarters.

 

China hopes Tiangong will be complete by the end of 2022.

 


 

Source:
courtesy of BBC NEWS

by BBC NEWS

 

If you have any stories or news that you would like to share with the global online community, please feel free to share it with us by contacting us directly at [email protected]

 

Related News


Lahad Datu Murder: Remand Of 13 Students Extende

 2024-03-30 07:57:54

Is Myanmar's Army Reversing Its Losses? It's Complicated

 2024-04-29 00:56:35

Philips Pays $1.1bn To Settle Respirator Case

 2024-04-30 00:23:36