Difference between revisions of "Space pollution"

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==Description:==
==Description:==
Fossil fuels are non-renewable natural resources. There is a limited amount of fossil fuel reserves. Fossil fuels are being consumed faster than they are produced by the earth and they will eventually be exhausted.  
Since the 1950s, many satellites have been launched to serve as communications relay devices and image sensors. But along with the space age came the beginnings of space pollution. Today, space is littered with non-functional satellites and booster rockets.
 
These pieces of space wreckage continue to orbit the Earth on paths that cannot be controlled from the ground. Collisions are increasingly common and pose a danger to active satellites. At a speed of 15 kilometres per second—a bullet travels at about 1 kilometre per second—even a splinter of paint can cause damage, such as by piercing an astronaut's space suit.
 
There are now more than 10,000 known objects larger than four inches in diameter that are tracked by U.S. ground surveillance equipment. An estimated 700 of them are operating satellites. The rest is discarded flotsam.
 
 


==Enablers:==
==Enablers:==
* We are dependent on fossil fuels as they power almost all equipment and machinery. They are used for heating homes and businesses, running businesses, tranportation and communication networks.Almost every aspect of modern life is made from, powered with, or affected by fossil fuels.
* More and more countries are launching into space. America and China are engaged in a space race to the moon, mars and beyond.
* They are the cheapest and safest source of energy currently available to everyone.
* Launch of the Galileo satellite system
* Need for energy across the world is increasing.
* Costs of clean up
* Costs of redesigning ships
* Lack of control and standards


==Inhibitors:==
==Inhibitors:==
* Burning of fossil fuels pollute the air and cause global warming.
* New standards being adopted e.g. International Committee on Space Contamination adopts resolution that spaceflight standards for all countries should include a requirement for the space device developers to ensure the objects return from orbit.
* People are increasingly aware of problems with fossil fuels and are trying to find ways to limit our dependence on them.
* Becoming a bigger safety hazard to space missions
* Fossil fuels are increasing in price with time.
* Growing awareness
* Renewable sources of energy
* Safety hazard on Earth from falling debris e.g. A 550-pound main propellant tank of the second stage of a Delta 2 rocket fell near Georgetown, Texas in 1997. A 156-pound piece of space debris fell near Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in 2001.


==Paradigms:==
==Paradigms:==
With the conflict in the Middle East, there has been growing concern over the availability of oil in the Middle East. Experts have also said that there is only another 40 years of crude oil left. Geologists are suggesting that global oil production could peak and decline steeply much sooner, increasing oil prices. Non-OPEC oil producing countries are already nearing peak production leaving most of the reserves in the unstable Middle East. Increasing tensions between Islam and the West will likely threaten access to affordable oil.
 


==Experts:==
==Experts:==
Petroleum geologists
Space exploratory scientists, space debris analysts




==Timing:==
==Timing:==
* Around 900 AD, coal was discovered and was soon widely used. The population rose to 1 billion in 1800.
*  
* In 1850, crude oil was discovered in Romania, and in 1859 the first North American oil well went into operation. Machinery availability and usage increased. In 1930, there were 2 billion people; in 1960, 3 billion; in 1974, 4; in 1987, 5; and in 1999, there were 6 billion inhabitants of this planet.
* In 1933 Viktor Schauberger, in his book “Unserer sinnlos Arbeit” (Our Senseless Toil), wrote: “The temperature on earth is a product of balancing processes involving carbonaceous matter in the earth (note: Schauberger used “carbonaceous matter” to mean all organic and mineral matter like coal, crude oil, natural gas, minerals etc. excluding oxygen and hydrogen) and the oxygen that penetrates the earth dissolved in rainwater. When all this highly organised carbonaceous mater is extracted from the earth by humans, these balanced processes will be interrupted. As a result the outer layer of the earth will cool down and the atmosphere will become colder.
* At the end of 2004, world proven crude oil reserves stood at 1,144,013 million barrels, of which 896,659 million barrels, or 78.4 per cent, was in OPEC Member Countries.
*According to the reference case of OPEC's World Energy Model (OWEM), total world oil demand in 2000 is put at 76 million barrels per day, As world economic growth continues, crude oil demand will also rise to 90.6m b/d in 2010 and 103.2m b/d by 2020.


==Web Resources:==
==Web Resources:==
*[1] [http://www.calder.net/mwright/2003-10-06-renewable-energy.html http://www.calder.net/mwright/2003-10-06-renewable-energy.html ]
*[1] [http://142.206.72.67/01/01b/01b_supp/01b_supp_003_e.htm http://142.206.72.67/01/01b/01b_supp/01b_supp_003_e.htm]
*[2] [http://www.emagazine.com/view/?171 http://www.emagazine.com/view/?171 ]
*[2] [http://perdurabo10.tripod.com/id761.html http://perdurabo10.tripod.com/id761.html]
* [3] [http://www.zegg.de/englisch/oekobroschuere/energiegeschichte.php http://www.zegg.de/englisch/oekobroschuere/energiegeschichte.php]
* [3] [http://www.space.com/news/space_junk_010514.html http://www.space.com/news/space_junk_010514.html]
* [4] [http://www.solcomhouse.com/fossilfuels.htm http://www.solcomhouse.com/fossilfuels.htm]
* [4] [http://www.solcomhouse.com/fossilfuels.htm http://www.solcomhouse.com/fossilfuels.htm]

Revision as of 19:51, 6 May 2006

Description:

Since the 1950s, many satellites have been launched to serve as communications relay devices and image sensors. But along with the space age came the beginnings of space pollution. Today, space is littered with non-functional satellites and booster rockets.

These pieces of space wreckage continue to orbit the Earth on paths that cannot be controlled from the ground. Collisions are increasingly common and pose a danger to active satellites. At a speed of 15 kilometres per second—a bullet travels at about 1 kilometre per second—even a splinter of paint can cause damage, such as by piercing an astronaut's space suit.

There are now more than 10,000 known objects larger than four inches in diameter that are tracked by U.S. ground surveillance equipment. An estimated 700 of them are operating satellites. The rest is discarded flotsam.


Enablers:

  • More and more countries are launching into space. America and China are engaged in a space race to the moon, mars and beyond.
  • Launch of the Galileo satellite system
  • Costs of clean up
  • Costs of redesigning ships
  • Lack of control and standards

Inhibitors:

  • New standards being adopted e.g. International Committee on Space Contamination adopts resolution that spaceflight standards for all countries should include a requirement for the space device developers to ensure the objects return from orbit.
  • Becoming a bigger safety hazard to space missions
  • Growing awareness
  • Safety hazard on Earth from falling debris e.g. A 550-pound main propellant tank of the second stage of a Delta 2 rocket fell near Georgetown, Texas in 1997. A 156-pound piece of space debris fell near Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in 2001.

Paradigms:

Experts:

Space exploratory scientists, space debris analysts


Timing:

Web Resources: