Topic: Space Junk

5 chapters across the catalog

AI Factory
Episode 1763 2:30:29 - 2:32:17

1763: AI Factory

Cosmos 482, Soviet Space Junk Re-entry

The Cosmos 482 lander, a Soviet-era spacecraft launched toward Venus in 1972, has finally re-entered Earth's atmosphere. The half-ton piece of space junk made an uncontrolled re-entry over the Indian Ocean after circling the planet in an irregular orbit for over five decades.

Under Salt
Episode 1501 7:39 - 9:47

1501: Under Salt

C-SPAN Technical Failures and Chinese Space Debris

C-SPAN experiences a series of technical difficulties during a call-in segment, leading to dropped lines from viewers in Texas and Pennsylvania. Separately, news reports highlight the re-entry of Chinese space debris, initially described in terrifying terms despite the statistical probability of being struck by such debris being roughly six in ten trillion. The odds are compared unfavorably to winning the Powerball lottery.

Peak Woke
Episode 1345 2:13:39 - 2:17:53

1345: Peak Woke

Chinese Rocket Re-entry, Space Junk Regulation Debate

A 24-ton Chinese rocket stage makes an uncontrolled re-entry into Earth's atmosphere, landing in the Indian Ocean. NPR reports on the incident, highlighting calls for greater international regulation of space debris. The hosts use the inability of scientists to predict the exact landing time or location to question the accuracy of long-term climate change models.

Jabs for Jesus
Episode 1344 2:53:37 - 2:56:05

1344: Jabs for Jesus

Chinese Rocket Reentry, Rods from God

An out-of-control Chinese rocket is tracking for reentry into Earth's atmosphere, with debris potentially landing anywhere from New York to New Zealand. The hosts compare the falling debris to "Rods from God," a theoretical space-based kinetic weapon, and speculate on the implications of space warfare.

Cocked Pistol
Episode 339 1:56:31 - 2:00:02

339: Cocked Pistol

NASA Satellite Re-entry, UARS Space Junk

NASA's Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS), a 12,000-pound piece of space junk, is expected to fall back to Earth in an uncontrolled re-entry. NASA scientists state the debris could land anywhere between 57 degrees north and south latitude, covering most of the world's populated areas.