Astronomers Predict SpaceX Space Junk Will Crash Into Moon

A chunk of a SpaceX rocket that blasted off seven years ago and was abandoned in space after completing its mission will crash into the moon in March, experts say.

The rocket was deployed in 2015 to put into orbit a NASA satellite called the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR).

Since then, the second stage of the rocket, or booster, has been floating in what mathematicians call a chaotic orbit, astronomer Bill Gray told AFP on Wednesday.

It was Gray who calculated the space junk’s new collision course with the moon.

The booster passed quite close to the moon in January in a rendezvous that altered its orbit, he said.

He is behind Project Pluto, software that allows for calculating the trajectory of asteroids and other objects in space and is used in NASA-financed space observation programs.

A week after the rocket stage whizzed close to the moon, Gray observed it again and concluded it would crash into the moon’s dark side on March 4 at more than 5,500 miles per hour (9,000 kilometers per hour).

Gray appealed to the amateur astronomer community to join him in observing the booster, and his conclusion was confirmed.

The exact time and spot of impact may change slightly from his forecast, but there is widespread agreement that there will be a collision on the moon that day.

“I’ve been tracking junk of this sort for about 15 years, and this is the first unintentional lunar impact that we’ve had,” Gray told Agence France-Presse.

Crater expected

Astronomer Jonathan McDowell told AFP it’s possible that similar impacts have taken place unnoticed.

“There’re at least 50 objects that were left in deep Earth orbit in the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s that were just abandoned there. We didn’t track them,” he said.

“Now, we’re picking up a couple of them … but a lot of them, we’re not finding, and so they’re not there anymore,” he added. “Probably at least a few of them hit the moon accidentally and we just didn’t notice.”

The impact of the SpaceX rocket chunk weighing 4 tons on the moon will not be visible from Earth in real time.

But it will leave a crater that scientists will be able to observe with spacecraft and satellites like NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter or India’s Chandrayaan-2, and thus learn more about the geology of the moon.

Spacecraft have been intentionally crashed into the moon before for scientific purposes, such as during the Apollo missions to test seismometers.

In 2009, NASA sent a rocket stage hurling into the moon near its south pole to look for water.

But most rockets do not go so far from Earth. SpaceX brings its rocket boosters back through the Earth’s atmosphere so they disintegrate over the ocean. The first stage is recovered and reused.

‘Time to start regulating’

Gray said there could be more unintentional crashes into the moon in the future as the U.S. and Chinese space programs leave more junk in orbit.

McDowell noted these events “start to be problematic when there’s a lot more traffic.”

“It’s actually no one’s job to keep track of the junk that we leave out in deep Earth orbit,” he added. “I think now’s the time to start regulating it.”

SpaceX did not immediately respond to a request for comment from AFP.

Elon Musk’s company is currently developing a lunar lander that should allow NASA to send astronauts back to the moon by 2025 at the earliest.

Source: Voice of America

Malawi’s president dissolves cabinet over corruption allegations

Malawi’s President Lazarus Chakwera has dissolved the country’s entire cabinet amid charges of corruption against several ministers, he announced in an address to the nation.

Chakwera said that he had decided to allow the three ministers and other public officers accused of corruption to face their charges.

“I have dissolved my entire cabinet effective immediately, and all the functions of cabinet revert to my office until I announce a reconfigured cabinet in two days,” Chakwera said in a national address on Monday.

He added that the reconfigured cabinet will exclude Minister of Lands Kezzie Msukwa, who was arrested last month in a bribery case.

Msukwa is accused of benefitting from land deals involving a UK-based Malawian businessman.

Meanwhile, Labour Minister Ken Kandodo is accused of diverting COVID-19 funds and Energy Minister Newton Kambala was accused of meddling in the awarding of fuel import deals.

ECM, an assembly of Malawi’s Catholic bishops, said authorities must ensure that no one is “pressurised, intimidated, or influenced” in the pursuit of justice.

“Let no suspect, however powerful, wealthy or who their connections are, be shielded or protected,” the bishops said in a statement.

Malawi is one of the world’s poorest countries, with nearly three-quarters of the population living on less than $2 a day.

The Southern African nation is amongst the smallest countries on the continent hit hard by floods, prolonged dry spells, crop-destroying pests, and the coronavirus pandemic, leaving 15 percent of the population in need of food aid.

Though small in size, it features in the top 10 in Africa in terms of population density.

Chakwera, who is also the head of the Malawi Congress Party (MCP), the country’s oldest and the biggest in the governing Tonse Alliance, said he would look to reinstate a new cabinet in the next 48 hours.

He had been facing increasing rebellion from within the coalition with many of its members accusing his party of corruption, nepotism and pushing the country to the brink of an economic crisis.

The president’s decision came close on the heels of the arrest of three former officials of the former governing party Democratic Progressive Party, which included the former finance minister and central bank governor, touted to be his prime challengers for the election scheduled in 2025.

Source: Nam News Network