When Sir Keir Starmer left for Beijing earlier this week, he probably didn’t imagine that a Chinese rocket would be ...
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- As more and more space junk comes crashing down, a new study shows how earthquake monitors can better track incoming objects by tuning into their sonic booms.
Old satellites and other space junk fall toward Earth every day, and the shock waves they create could be used to track their trajectories, according to new research.
A recent event involving a Russian satellite, the Luch/Olymp, which appears to have disintegrated in orbit, has raised alarming questions about the rising threats posed by space debris. The satellite, ...
Williams wasn’t injured by this mysterious item, which she later learned came from a space rocket—making her the first person ...
What goes up must come down! Dan Smith shows how pieces of falling space junk can be tracked by their sonic booms. ☄️🔊 ...
As the threat of falling spacecraft increases, using earthquake sensors to detect the effects of their sonic booms could ...
Earthquake sensors can detect sonic booms generated by reentering space debris to help track the potentially dangerous ...
(Gray News) – The risk of space debris falling through airspace is going up in 2026, according to researchers. Experts said spacecraft, or parts of one, fall back into the Earth’s atmosphere once a ...
Falling space junk is becoming a real-world hazard, and scientists have found a clever new way to track it using instruments ...
The Saudi Space Agency announced on Tuesday the names of the winning teams of the global “DebriSolver” competition, one of ...
Networks created to measure quakes deep underground could also track old, potentially dangerous satellites burning up in the ...