NASA has sent a huge number of technical gadgets like rockets, satellites, telescopes, spacecraft and more in space to monitor objects like asteroids, meteors, planets, Sun, galaxies, black holes and much more. However, some of that equipment has a nasty habit of falling back to Earth. In fact, NASA's famous Skylab fell back to Earth some 40 years ago, remember? And now as per the latest details, the dead, or retired, NASA Earth Radiation Budget Satellite will be falling back to Earth, it has been revealed. It will be reentering the planet's atmosphere most likely on January 8, 2023.
Informing about the same, NASA said in a report, "in early January NASA's retired Earth Radiation Budget Satellite (ERBS) is expected to reenter Earth's atmosphere after almost four decades in space. For 21 of those years, the ERBS actively investigated how the Earth absorbed and radiated energy from the Sun, and made measurements of stratospheric ozone, water vapor, nitrogen dioxide, and aerosols."
As of January 5, the Department of Defense predicted that the 5400-pound satellite will reenter the atmosphere at approximately 6:40 p.m. EST on Sunday, January 8 with an uncertainty of +/- 17 hours. NASA and the Defense Department will continue to monitor the reentry and update the predictions, the report added.
NASA expects most of the satellite to burn up as it travels through the atmosphere. However, worryingly, components that are big and strong are expected to survive the reentry and hit Earth. While that is very risky, the chances of harm coming to anyone is very low – approximately 1 in 9400.
Launched from the Space Shuttle Challenger on October 5, 1984, the ERBS spacecraft was part of NASA's three-satellite Earth Radiation Budget Experiment
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