Seven years ago, SpaceX launched its first mission out of Earth orbit for
NOAA, and since then, its upper stage has stuck around. But, according to a
community of observers, it will meet an end crashing into the Moon soon.
What SpaceX launch was this?
For SpaceX, 2015 was a breakout year. It began with the company’s first
droneship landing, which failed, and ended with the first-ever successful
landing of a Falcon 9 booster back at LZ-1. 2015 was also the last time the
company lagged behind ULA’s Atlas V as the most launched US rocket for the
year.
Finally, SpaceX was tasked to launch NOAA’s Deep Space Climatary Observatory
(DSCOVR) out to the Earth-Sun L1 Lagrange Point, opposite the L2 point
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is arriving at today. DSCOVR was the first
mission for SpaceX to leave Earth’s orbit and was the first time the
rocket’s second stage couldn’t use the Earth’s atmosphere to deorbit itself,
a tactic regularly used to reduce space debris.
This meant DSCOVR’s spent stage was stuck orbiting around the Earth and Moon
for the past seven years. Unfortunately, there are not many stable orbits
around the Earth and the Moon. The Moon does a pretty good job slinging
unwanted debris out around the Sun or crashing into itself. This final
option will be the fate of the spent SpaceX stage.
When will SpaceX’s second stage crash into the Moon?
According to Bill Gray and a team of observers collecting extra data,
SpaceX’s second stage is expected to crash into the Moon on March 4, as
first reported by
Ars Technica.
This isn’t a perfect prediction – the object is tumbling, and while it’s
well understood how the Earth, Moon, and Sun’s gravity will affect it, the
projections of the light hitting it (which can affect orbits in space) are
less understood. Gray writes, “these unpredictable effects are very small.
But they will accumulate between now and 2022 March 4.”
What does this mean for orbiting Moon missions
Luckily, only a handful of missions orbit the Moon, so a collision is
improbable. However, this will be a rare occurrence for missions like NASA’s
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter to study the effects of a lunar impact.
Many mission’s spent stages have been used to impact the Moon in the past.
Most notably during Apollo, NASA would impact both the S-IVB (Saturn V third
stage) and Lunar Module’s ascent stage into the surface. Then seismometers
would record the “moonquakes” that would occur.
More observations will be needed to fine-tune the exact time of impact
before lunar assets can be appropriately readied to observe it, however.
Source: Link
Tags:
Space & Astrophysics
So SpaceX is getting to the moon in Q1 2022! :)
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