when a two-pound piece of debris slightly smaller than a soda can fell from the International Space Station, crashing through a family's roof in Florida. The family is suing NASA over the incident.
As more space junk is falling to Earth uncontrolled, scientists are using seismometers to track the debris.
Photo submitted by Lindsay Kinley KFIZ is receiving photos and video of what appears to be some space debris breaking apart ...
Also, in space news NASA recently shared images from the robotic explorers a recent image of a color-enhanced view of Jupiter from NASA’s Juno mission taken in December 2024 and a few robotic ...
The ESA has released the Zero Debris Technical Booklet to elucidate the challenges to a zero-debris future and propose ...
NASA's TES-22 CubeSat launched with tech that speeds up satellite deorbiting to clear space debris. It carries technology to ...