Up to 200 pound pieces of China’s Space Station could hit the Earth’s Surface

Pieces weighing up to 200 pounds of China’s space station could make it to the surface when out-of-control 8.5-tonne laboratory breaks apart in the atmosphere.

An 8.5-tonne Chinese space station has accelerated its out-of-control descent towards Earth and is expected to crash to the surface within a few months.

The Tiangong-1 or “Heavenly Palace” lab was launched in 2011 and described as a “potent political symbol” of China, part of an ambitious scientific push to turn China into a space superpower.

But in 2016, after months of speculation, Chinese officials confirmed they had lost control of the space station and it would crash to Earth in 2017 or 2018. China’s space agency has since notified the UN that it expects Tiangong-1 to come down between October 2017 and April 2018.

Although much of the craft is expected to burn up in the atmosphere, McDowell says some parts might still weigh up to 100kg when they crash into the Earth’s surface.

2 thoughts on “Up to 200 pound pieces of China’s Space Station could hit the Earth’s Surface”

  1. Haha, I guess that’s one way to describe deorbiting an old lab module retired 3 years ago
    And avoiding any mention of Tiangong-2 is a nice touch

    • Deorbiting is a maneuver that you do on purpose, when you want, or something that happens to you at some random point because you can’t control the spaceship. First option is `slightly` better.

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