Russian spacecraft crashes into Pacific west of Chilean coast
By Associated Press,
Pieces from the Phobos-Ground, which had become stuck in Earth’s orbit, landed in water Sunday 1,250 kilometers (775 miles) west of Wellington Island in Chile’s south, the Russian military Air and Space Defense Forces said in a statement carried by the country’s news agencies.
The military space tracking facilities were monitoring the
probe’s crash, its spokesman Col. Alexei Zolotukhin said. Zolotukhin
said the deserted ocean area is where Russia guides its discarded space
cargo ships serving the International Space Station.
RIA Novosti
news agency, however, cited Russian ballistic experts who said the
fragments fell over a broader patch of Earth’s surface, spreading from
the Atlantic and including the territory of Brazil. It said the midpoint
of the crash zone was located in the Brazilian state of Goias.
The
$170 million craft was one of the heaviest and most toxic pieces of
space junk ever to crash to Earth, but space officials and experts said
the risks posed by its crash were minimal because the toxic rocket fuel
on board and most of the craft’s structure would burn up in the
atmosphere high above the ground anyway.
The Phobos-Ground was
designed to travel to one of Mars’ twin moons, Phobos, land on it,
collect soil samples and fly them back to Earth in 2014 in one of the
most daunting interplanetary missions ever. It got stranded in Earth’s
orbit after its Nov. 9 launch, and efforts by Russian and European Space
Agency experts to bring it back to life failed.
Prof. Heiner
Klinkrad, Head of The European Space Agency’s Space Debris Office that
was monitoring the probe’s descent, said the craft didn’t pose any
significant risks.
“This one is way, way down in the ranking,” he
said in a telephone interview from his office in Berlin, adding that
booster rockets contain more solid segments that may survive fiery
re-entries.
Thousands of pieces of derelict space vehicles orbit
Earth, occasionally posing danger to astronauts and satellites in orbit,
but as far as is known, no one has ever been hurt by falling space
debris.
Russia’s space agency Roscosmos predicted that only
between 20 and 30 fragments of the Phobos probe with a total weight of
up to 200 kilograms (440 pounds) would survive the re-entry and plummet
to Earth.
Klinkrad agreed with that assessment, adding that about
100 metric tons of space junk fall on Earth every year. “This is 200
kilograms out of these 100 tons,” he said.
The Phobos-Ground
weighed 13.5 metric tons (14.9 tons), and that included a load of 11
metric tons (12 tons) of highly toxic rocket fuel intended for the long
journey to the Martian moon of Phobos and left unused as the probe got
stranded in orbit around Earth.
Roscosmos said that all of the
fuel will burn up on re-entry, a forecast Klinkrad said was supported by
calculations done by NASA and the ESA. He said the craft’s tanks are
made of aluminum alloy that has a very low melting temperature, and they
will burst at an altitude of more than 100 kilometers (60 miles).
The Phobos-Ground was Russia’s most expensive and the most ambitious space mission since Soviet times. Its mission to the crater-dented, potato-shaped Martian moon was to give scientists precious materials that could shed more light on the genesis of the solar system.
Russia’s space chief has acknowledged the Phobos-Ground mission
was ill-prepared, but said that Roscosmos had to give it the go-ahead
so as not to miss the limited Earth-to-Mars launch window.
Its
predecessor, Mars-96, which was built by the same Moscow-based NPO
Lavochkin company, experienced an engine failure and crashed shortly
after its launch in 1996. Its crash drew strong international fears
because of around 200 grams of plutonium onboard. The craft eventually
showered its fragments over the Chile-Bolivia border in the Andes
Mountains, and the pieces were never recovered.
The worst ever
radiation spill from a derelict space vehicle came in January 1978 when
the nuclear-powered Cosmos 954 satellite crashed over northwestern
Canada. The Soviets claimed the craft completely burned up on re-entry,
but a massive recovery effort by Canadian authorities recovered a dozen
fragments, most of which were radioactive.
The Phobos-Ground also
contained a tiny quantity of the radioactive metal Cobalt-57 in one of
its instruments, but Roscosmos said it poses no threat of radioactive
contamination.
The spacecraft also carried a small cylinder with a
collection of microbes as part of an experiment by the Pasadena,
California-based Planetary Society that designed to explore whether they
can survive interplanetary travel. The cylinder is attached to a
capsule that was supposed to deliver Phobos ground samples back to
Earth.
Igor Marinin, the editor of Russia’s Novosti Kosmonavtiki
magazine, said on Russia’s NTV television that it would likely be
destroyed.
Calls to Brazil’s National Space Institute and also the
Goias state security secretariat were not returned. There was no
mention in the Brazilian press of any debris crashing in Brazilian
territory.
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