There are ~10k active satellites currently orbiting Earth— but what happens when they start dropping on us?
That’s what the European Space Agency (ESA) hopes to find out with a new project called the Destructive Reentry Assessment Container Object (or DRACO, with that handy acronym explaining why it’s both a “container” and an “object”).
This is all in pursuit of the ESA’s goal to eliminate the creation of space junk by 2030. There are ~30k pieces of trackable garbage floating around in space, any one of which could hit something important and cause problems.
… that people have watched something fall from orbit with baited breath.
In 2001, Taco Bell offered to give everyone in the US a free taco if a piece of the Russian space station Mir landed on a target near Australia.
The station’s core hit somewhere closer to Chile, saving Taco Bell ~$10m.
Hopefully a brave European fast-food chain will make a similar offer and try to catch part of DRACO.