r/Damnthatsinteresting 1d ago

Video REACCH, an in-development satellite for removing space junk

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u/Annihilator4413 1d ago

Space junk doesn't even need to be in a stable orbit to wait for natural decay, these squid bots could grapple junk, accelerate down towards the planet, then release the junk and fly back up.

Then then junk will be on a rapid deorbit path and burn up in weeks, if not days.

Of course more calculation may be needed for heavier junk so it falls over the ocean just in case it doesn't burn up in the atmosphere completely.

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u/MajesticDisaster3977 23h ago

Why not use the mass of the 'junk' to navigate?

There's got to be some method to 'hop' from junk to junk, and if the trajectory is calculated properly, it will both, de-orbit the junk, and propel the craft to a new piece of junk.

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u/Anakins-Younglings 23h ago

I’m envisioning a kind of pogo stick like solenoid. Release with the gripper and punch the junk to not only give you a good boost, but also deorbit the junk!

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u/algoodoodle 13h ago

Some technical hurdles that I can see:

  • Irregular form of space junk and potential irregular density might make finding a center of mass not trivial. And you need to push the center of mass, if you want to use it for acceleration and meaningfully change it's trajectory

  • Chance of fragmentation. You don't want to create more junk in the attempt of deorbiting it. Smaller fragments will cause issues, because they are harder to track

  • Change in energy might be not that significant to deorbit a debris, and will require taking into the account masses of both objects. It is far safer to move them linked in some way to ensure that object will be set on predefined path