StarTalk Radio - Cosmic Queries– Space Junk! with Moriba Jah
Episode Date: July 5, 2021What do we do with all this space junk? On this episode, Neil deGrasse Tyson and comic co-host Chuck Nice answer questions about the stuff we put into orbit with astrodynamicist and space environmenta...list, Dr. Moriba Jah. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-queries-space-junk-with-moriba-jah/ Thanks to our Patrons Louis Smith, Dana Fambro, David Johnston, Tracy Fox, Charlene Hale, Lucas Pires, and Paulina Banach-Mazur for supporting us this week. Photo Credit: NASA Image: ISS056E025305 Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
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Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
This is StarTalk. I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist. And today, we're going to talk about the space environment in which business, surveillance, travel all takes place.
It's like from Earth's surface up to the top of the atmosphere.
That's something we haven't talked about.
Chuck, that's where we're going today.
Yes, that's right.
I like space junk better than...
See, you said it all fancy.
I just like to say space junk.
Space junk.
Space junk.
I almost hear Quincy Jones in the back.
Sanford and Son in space.
Exactly.
That would be the next.
That's right.
Well, I've got one of the world's, if not the world's expert on this very subject right here with StarTalk.
And his name is Moriba Jha.
Moriba, welcome to StarTalk.
Thank you so much.
It's an honor and a pleasure to be here with all of you.
Yeah, so you're an astrodynamicist and space environmentalist.
That sounds like if no one knew what that was, you would have to invent it just because the world needs it, right?
Is that a fair way to describe what you do?
Yeah, absolutely. Yeah.
You know what, though? I got to tell you,
that means that there was a time when there wasn't, when we didn't need you. So this is
not a good thing that you exist because it's like social media manager. There was a time
that meant that you had somebody, but you were clearly a person who socialized with the media quite a bit.
And, you know, you needed somebody to handle that.
It didn't mean what it means now.
Right, right, right.
It's a bad thing that we have to have you.
It's a bad thing that you exist.
I'm sorry.
I've got to say that.
No, no, no.
I agree with all of you full heartedly.
You know, after about 1957 with the launch of Sputnik, the need for me to exist began to grow.
Right.
So now Sputnik.
Well, let me finish with the man's resume.
Oh, I forgot.
I'm sorry.
I already know his resume.
You can get me all in it.
I'm ready to talk to him because he's got some fascinating stuff.
I'm sorry.
He's got some fascinating stuff.
So he's a professor and researcher at UT Austin at the Cockrell School of Engineering.
And so let me just give the list here because every one of these could be like an entire StarTalk.
Non-gravitational astrodynamics.
I love that.
But I don't know what in the universe is moving without the influence of gravity.
Advanced non-linear multilinear multicenter object tracking.
Sounds like the Pentagon needs you.
Prediction and information fusion.
What a space object detection.
This man is like, okay, if we're going to have a space war,
I want him on our side.
Tell me about it.
But on top of that, and we'll get to it in a later segment, but I want to put it up front right here.
Eyes on the Sky mixed reality experience.
That's not with the engineering department.
What is that?
Yeah.
So interestingly enough, we have some faculty that are in the fine arts and they've created something called Texas Immersive.
And it's really trying to combine digital and
physical experience for storytelling. Wow. Okay. So this would increase the impact
of any kind of science that you do. Absolutely. Yeah. 110% because one of the things that I've
seen is just going to talk to scientists, it's like the echo chamber and the self-licking ice cream cone,
not so useful.
So I need to be able to reach people
and the storytelling with mixed reality
seems to be something that could really help.
I love that.
And the website's eyesonthesky.org.
So that's good.
So Chuck, would I keep interrupting?
No, I was just going to say,
I just want to be a self-licking ice cream cone now.
That sounds awesome. That just sounds like the happiest thing in the world. I keep interrupting. No, I was just going to say, I just want to be a self-licking ice cream cone now.
That sounds awesome.
That just sounds like the happiest thing in the world.
Yeah, but I think there's a limit, though.
I think that's part of the problem here. It's like the snake eating its tail.
Yes, exactly.
There's a point where that doesn't really work out.
For the snake or the tail.
That's right.
That's right.
So we're actually going to turn this into a Cosmic Queries,
where we've actually solicited questions from our fan base.
Chuck, I think you have those questions, right?
I hope so.
Okay.
Give me the other Chuck.
Where's the Chuck that has the questions?
But before we get there, while Chuck is finding his questions,
Morabai, you wrote something recently just towards the end of May,
which seemed to me to be a kind of a self-reflection,
autobiographical sort of memoir.
It's an arc of life from your beginnings to where you are right now.
And I just want to ask what compelled you to write that?
Because it is a highly unusual story.
And between you and me, every interesting person I know and have ever met has had an unusual background.
It wasn't just that linear fact, go to college, go to graduate school, get the degree, get the degree, and then boom.
No, the most interesting people are the ones who've lived a little. And often that living involves stress, trauma,
failures, as well as achievements. So what can you tell us about that?
Yeah, look, I mean, I grew up in Venezuela and, you know, I went to military school for high
school and a lot of trial and tribulation going through that.
I enlisted in the U.S. military when I graduated and I wanted to be a fighter pilot.
Watched plenty of Top Gun when I was a teenager. So that was like my dream.
I never thought that space would have a place for me.
have a place for me. And, and yeah, basically as a security guard, guarding nukes in Montana,
that's when I started noticing dots going across the sky that disappeared in the middle of the sky. And I'm like, is it just me seeing this? Like, is this a UFO? Like, what is this? Right. I just,
I was completely ignorant. And when I found it. But just to be clear, it most definitely was
a UFO because you didn't know what you were looking at.
Exactly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was definitely UFO for me, right?
And so...
For others, it would have been an IFO.
That night, for you, it was a UFO.
Okay.
Absolutely.
So, yeah.
So, basically, you know, when I was able to figure out that these things were human-made
objects reflecting sunlight and going through
Earth's shadow, that really
crystallized
this
curiosity for me to want
to know more about that. And that's where
I think my path towards
astrodynamics and motion of stuff in space
started. Chuck, you see what happens
when you look up sometimes? See what happens?
And now by you and Philadelphia,
I don't know where you've been looking.
When I looked up, what I saw was a ceiling.
So,
not quite the same.
By the way, you have to not only look up, you have to be curious
about what you see. Right. Exactly what Moriba
was doing. Okay, so how
were you American born
in Venezuela, not Venezuelan? Otherwise you
couldn't just join the U.S. military. No, that's good for you to notice that. So I was born here
in the U.S. in San Francisco, actually. My mom's from Haiti. My father from Sierra Leone.
They got divorced when I was very young. My mom met this guy from Venezuela. So we moved to
Venezuela when I was seven years old.
Wow. Okay. And tell me about your life in terms of discipline, because to be a faculty member
at a major university specializing in the fields you do requires discipline. So how do you go from
my reading your tract, basically no discipline to discipline?
Because if that's a secret, you can let out.
And by the way, that should be your new job, teaching people that.
I'm going to talk about getting paid.
Nice, nice.
Yeah, absolutely. So look, I think when I was a teenager and kind of having some moments of self-reflection and going through some very low points in my life, and I think that I kind of discovered I want my life to serve a purpose for humanity, for other people. And I think the discipline came as a function of my inner commitment
to that inner clarion call of thou shalt do something that's useful for humanity
and don't let other people's opinion become your reality sort of thing.
I think that's where that came from.
Okay.
So, but that takes a level of maturity, particularly growing up to
even realize that. Yeah. I mean, I, um, having gone through military school, I think that was
being forced to grow up faster than a regular teenager would have. And then doing four years
in the military at a nuclear missile base in Montana that was also
uh something that instilled some hard knocks discipline into into me as well yeah if that
doesn't I don't know what will here's the nukes yeah you're on watch right yeah so yeah it's kind of hard to um screw that up and then you can't get out of it
with them my bad my bad that doesn't work yeah you're eating a sandwich and you sit back on the
control board and bam you pop the button yeah that's my my bad for a lot of people. Yeah, exactly. That's right. Everybody's bad.
Everybody's bad.
So before we get to our Q&A, could you give me some sense, give us all, some sense of the magnitude of the problem of space junk right now?
Yeah. In 1957, we launched Sputnik, one satellite that didn't live in orbit too long.
But since 1957, we've been launching hundreds, thousands of things.
And it turns out that now we track almost 30,000 individual objects in orbit around the Earth,
ranging in size from cell phone all the
way to the space station. These things are in different orbital highways going at very fast
speeds, as you know. And so when two things meet at the same place at the same time and the speeds
are quite different, bad things happen and they become smaller pieces and those collisions
generate more garbage and that sort of thing.
And we don't have any sort of space traffic rules, protocols, practices that people say,
hey, yeah, you know, if I'm going to head towards you and you're headed towards me,
we'll both turn left or do this.
There are no rules of thumb, you know, in Earth orbit, which makes things a little bit worse.
You mentioned things smaller, the size of a cell phone, but you don't mean actual cell
phones are in space, do you?
So actual cell, to the best of my knowledge, we don't have actual cell phones in Earth
orbit, but it wouldn't be a surprise to me if an astronaut went on a spacewalk and decided to pop this thing out.
And, you know, they left it like they've left wrenches and these sorts of things.
And people just don't talk about it sort of stuff that fell out of people's pockets.
That's right. It also wouldn't surprise me if if somebody has my carrier, which I won't disparage publicly, but they actually were just trying to get some service.
which I won't disparage publicly,
but they actually were just trying to get some service.
And that's how far they had to go to fly and get a damn signal.
Can you hear me now?
Can you hear me now?
I think that's what they needed to do for the commercial, man,
is actually, like, go up to the space station
and see how well that worked.
Actually, that's a good advertisement.
I'll buy that.
Right?
That's the carrier I'm going with.
So I love your expertise.
Let's see how our fan base, where they come from with regard to your expertise and their curiosity.
So, Chuck, what do you have?
All right.
So, Chuck, what do you have?
All right.
For Dr. Morbidja, we have questions that come from our Patreon patrons, which is how we solicit our questions now.
It used to be that we gleaned them from the various iterations that we find ourselves on the Internet. But now, if you want, you just support us on Patreon.com.
And then we'll read your question.
Here's the deal.
All right.
And then we'll read your question.
Here's the deal.
All right.
Jeff Johnson of Salt Lake City, Utah says,
Dr. Jha, can you please give us some insight into China's recent space station, Snafu?
Were they irresponsible or was there really little to no danger to Earth's inhabitants?
Or did they do it on purpose?
Yeah, right.
So, yeah, so this was a rocket booster from one of the stages, and it just, they didn't know where it was going to fall.
And I thought, when you launch something that big, you put little retro rockets or something
on it, and you guide the thing into the great toilet bowl of space, the Pacific Ocean.
So what went wrong here or what was not in the planning from the beginning?
Yeah, so I think you got it, as they say, tickety-boo there, Neil,
in that the responsible thing would have been to outfit this rocket with propellant and thrusters
to force it in to maximize the chance of the thing not surviving reentry.
But when you leave it to Mother Nature to clean up the mess,
hard to predict what Mother Nature is going to do sometimes.
And so I think that's where the increased risk is.
And until China actually puts on these thrusters for subsequent rocket bodies, it's a problem.
And it's really bad news to make the world, you know, spin up on, you know,
is the sky actually going to fall on me today?
So it sounds like the Wild West.
Aren't we overdue for some rules and regulations, a treaty that everyone, a treaty for what you do with your trash.
It's a trash treaty.
All right.
Everybody gets together.
Here's how you dispose of the recyclables, the smelly trash, the burnable trash.
Why don't we have that?
Yeah.
burnable trash. Why don't we have that? Yeah. So the interesting thing is that we do have a United Nations Convention on Liability and Damage, and it specifically states that, you know,
the parties to the treaty should avoid harmful interference. I would say that a big rocket body
falling on top of your head would constitute harmful interference. But the thing is, it's so
loosely interpreted that perhaps China is saying, well, we don't necessarily consider that harmful.
Harmful interference is not really defined. And I think that's the major issue.
So from a sheerly litigious standpoint, they were not-
Is that a word? Is that a word, Chuck?
Sheerly? I don't know how it is now.
Sheerly?
Sheerly? No, from a
sheer litigious standpoint.
Of, like, or pertaining to sheer.
Yes, sheerly. Right, there you go.
So they are,
I told you it's a word now.
In the Chuck dictionary.
I love it.
Look, let me tell you something.
There's three dictionaries, all right?
You got Webster's, you got Oxford, and you got Chuck.
There you go.
But so if you are looking technically by the law, they're not irresponsible.
But then if you wanted to attach morals to this, then yes, they would be irresponsible.
Yeah, absolutely. Right. And I think, you know, most to purposely deorbit this thing so that at least there's some
intent with how the thing might reenter and hopefully,
you know,
burn up.
So that's the next question.
Is it from Patreon?
Is it from you?
No,
it's from me.
I told you,
you want to ask a question.
You go.
I just joined Patreon.
I just joined while we were here.
Okay.
All right.
I wouldn't know.
All right, go.
Has the United States ever done this?
All right.
We will get to that after the break.
All right.
Yeah.
So it's one thing to point your finger.
If, you know, he who is without sin cast the first stone.
We will get back to that when star talk returns space junk be there
hey i'm roy hill percival, and I support StarTalk on Patreon.
Bringing the universe down to Earth, this is StarTalk with Neil deGrasse Tyson.
We're back.
Star Talk.
We've got a special guest, Morabajaj, who's a professor of, was it astrodynamics?
Did I get that right?
Yeah, absolutely.
Astrodynamics.
I love it.
I love it. He's at the University of Texas at Austin.
He's in their school of engineering.
And I have Chuck.
Ah! No. Texas at Austin and is in their school of engineering and I have Chuck. Before the break, Chuck asked a great question.
And even though he's not on Patreon, I'll let him ask this question.
It was here.
We are pointing our fingers at China for dropping one of their boosters.
Who knows where, right?
Well, we know where, but they didn't know where until it hit.
So are we without guilt in this
game of lost boosters no we're not in fact i would say in in low earth orbit where you can think of
low earth orbit going from about i don't know roughly 100 kilometer altitude to about you know
1200 kilometer altitude there's probably about 2000 uh dead rocket bodies derelict rocket
bodies uh of of the 2000 probably about 1300 belong to russia uh launched from the soviet uh
union era and all that stuff um still there yeah yeah yeah still there and and the remain out of
the remaining 700 i'm thinking that uh somewhere about uh 350 of
those are chinese and the rest are american so so the u.s has quite a few uh hundred dead rocket
bodies that are kind of like ticking time bombs and um yeah none of them have have i have will
have a controlled re-entry exactly what you're's what you're telling us. That's what I'm telling you.
Okay, so of all the non-controlled re-entries
going forward, based on your statistics,
half will be old Russia,
half of the half that remains
is China, and then what remains is going to be
us. So watch that space.
Plus Skylab, we didn't have that.
Seems like enough people went
in and out of Skylab, we should have known where that
would have fallen, and we didn't at the time. I was alive
and around and ready for that.
And I remembered Baskin-Robbins,
the ice cream store, said,
if you get hit with a Skylab
part, you will get an
ice cream cone that has every one of their flavors
stacked on top of it. Wow, what a
prize, right? What a prize
for being dead, yes. So tell me, what a prize, right? What a prize for being dead, yes.
So tell me, what happened with Skylab, America's first Skylab
laboratory? Yeah, I mean, as
you said, that thing reentered and people were
pretty freaked out about that. I remember the Mir space station.
That's the one that I remember the mere space station uh those were that's the one that i
remember was mere and uh even that was a very you know scary experience that's the russian russian
space station all right so we are not without guilt so we just have to it'd be nicer if we
weren't pretend we were high and mighty uh as we point out that kind of brings up uh that that
brings further to bear the point that you made about having international rules, actual rules.
You know, then everybody would have to follow them.
Yeah, yeah.
Chuck, give me some more questions.
All right, here we go.
This is Robert Weaver, and he says, hey, would it be possible to use the Lagrange point to make a giant pile of space debris?
the Lagrange point to make a giant pile of space debris.
Seems like that would be easier than bringing it all back to Earth and much more ethical than just flinging it out into space.
Also, in the future, we could use it like an auto junkyard.
And when we want components or metals or stuff like that,
we could just go to that to build in space instead of recycling.
Oh, wow.
So, Moriba, tell us first about Lagrange points.
Yeah, so basically these are points in a three-body system
where you have some stable and some unstable points,
places where this gravitational influence in that system
is, let's say, kind of null.
Things cancel each other out.
But yeah, out of the five points,
out of the five Lagrange points,
I believe two of them are stable
and the other three are unstable.
And so I would say this,
we need to find ways of not creating orbital landfills.
So the thing is sending stuff to Lagrange point
while you might be able, and oh,
by the way, even when you send stuff there, it doesn't mean it just stays there forever. Like,
you know, eventually the thing's going to drift out just due to perturbations that are
non-gravitational, mostly in that sort of stuff. Plus, as Neil, you clearly know this, there's more
than just a few bodies in the universe.
And so eventually, you know, the curvature of space-time will force these things out if they're uncontrolled.
So it's not a good answer, and it's not a viable solution.
And we should avoid trying to find a place in space to just send garbage to.
So, yeah.
So basically,
let me just see if I got this right.
He's asking whether or not
we could create
a celestial equivalent
of our ocean's great garbage patch.
Yeah.
Which is where the currents
come together and create a stillness.
That's right.
And then that stillness...
And let's do that in space.
And let's just do that in space.
Yeah, so we don't want to do that, Chuck.
Okay, so just let me throw some astrophysics in here, okay?
One of the attractive Lagrange points in the Jupiter orbit, the Jupiter-Sun orbit,
there's a leading Lagrange point and a trailing Lagrange point. If you look there,
there are asteroids that have collected there.
And they're called the Trojan asteroids. And so it's
fascinating. And we knew to look there because we said, here's a place where all the gravitational
forces cancel out. So there's got to be something. Anything that sort of
drifts in won't have a reason
to drift out very quickly or at all. So we actually find these places that are repositories,
but I'd like the trash heap example. And I think of Sanford and Son, space in space. We should do
that. For sure. If we do do that, it should have the theme song that goes along with it
we agree by the way every time you drop something off in that great uh junkyard in the sky
you sit here shut up dummy Shut up, dummy. And that's the week. All right, give me some more.
All right, here we go.
This is Chris Newbery.
And Chris says, hey, Chuck,
bet you don't get my last name correct on the first try.
Oh, man.
See, I should read these first.
I'm going to say Newbri instead of Nubri.
But anyway, because it's N-E-W-B-R-Y.
Dr. Tyson, just love you and love your Cosmic Queries book.
SpaceX, the idea that put 42,000 satellites into orbit for optimal internet around the world.
That being said, does that put a lot of junk into orbit for optimal internet around the world. That being said, does that put a lot of junk into orbit?
How much does that increase the risk of future endeavors
of this rock having such a net surrounding it?
Oh, so let me reshape that slightly.
So more of a, if we have functioning satellites, then they're not junk.
But if you have thousands and thousands of functioning satellites, isn't there still a risk that they could collide with each other?
Yeah.
And so I would say this.
Low Earth orbit is already building itself up to be this place with these functioning satellites, like you said, owned by different companies.
this place with these functioning satellites, like you said, owned by different companies,
but there isn't a space traffic coordination entity, right? So the thing is, people are making decisions about how to maneuver and how they want their satellites to behave,
but they're doing that in the absence of coordinating with other people that are also making decisions.
And so that does increase the risk of things, you know, bumping into each other in the night, so to speak.
And it's not and space isn't just so supremely empty that we shouldn't worry about it.
No, because we have very specific orbital highways where we put these satellites given the purpose that we want and right now for instance uh you know
with spacex and the starlings which oh by the way you know out of the nearly 30 000 objects that we
track um about 3500 are working satellites and elon owns about you know 1500 of those so so it's
already quite a bit but uh wait wait so wait Chuck, Elon is going to become Skynet.
Oh, my God.
There you go.
Oh.
Yes.
Look at that.
And Skynet's going to achieve consciousness.
Right.
And then that's the end of us all.
And by the way, Neil, he's your friend.
Do count him as a friend.
But you say that like, okay, I'm also to blame just because i know the guy all right well hold
on so i'm not saying that that elon has is at fault for anything what i'm what i am saying is
that he owns most of the working uh satellites uh in earth orbit he will continue to own most of them
um as i see now given the fact that he's got licenses to launch.
And so pretty much if you want to go beyond 500 kilometer altitude, you've got to coordinate
with Elon because you've got to go through his layer of Starlink satellites.
So the coordination piece is really important and that has not become manifest yet.
So that is an issue.
So I got this.
Elon is the next James Bond.
So he's 008.
And they say, I'm licensed to launch.
Licensed to launch.
Licensed to launch.
Exactly.
That's the next thing.
Right.
Oh, my God.
Well, first of all, that sounds ominous.
I know, right?
Right?
Because that guy may be on his way to being the first real supervillain.
And you heard how quickly Morbid backpedaled on pulling out his name.
Let me say something nice about him before you go to the next topic.
I didn't mean he's bad.
No, no, no.
He's good.
Nothing wrong with Helo.
Yeah, we all know that Jeff Bezos
is really the bad one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's the villain.
Plus, he's bald like Lex Luthor.
He actually does make for the perfect...
Lex Luthor.
Yeah, he's going to be
the world's first trillionaire, probably,
because he'll be the one that will land on an asteroid and mine it for all ofuthor. Yeah, he's going to be the world's first trillionaire, probably, because he'll be the one
that will land on an asteroid
and mine it for all of its presence.
Yeah, yeah.
Right.
All right, cool.
Let's go to...
Keep it going.
Avneesh Joshi.
And Avneesh says this.
Hi, Dr. Tyson, Mr. Nice,
and Dr. Jha.
I am 10 years old
and I want to be an astrophysicist.
My parents gifted me with the
StarTalk subscription on my
birthday, and this makes
me super, super excited.
Damn, now we can't have potty mouth
on the show. Damn.
So he says this,
I read that space debris
is causing the night sky to be
much brighter. Why does this happen
if it does, and will it not make stargazing that much more difficult?
How can we overcome it?
Wow.
Man.
Look at this kid.
Man, what were you doing when you were 10?
Yeah.
Say one thing.
It wasn't that.
It wasn't that.
That's a good answer, Moriba.
I don't know the answer, but that is the answer.
I was writing letters like, dear Santa Claus.
People were like, you still believe in Santa?
Anyway, go ahead.
So what about night sky observing?
What's going on there?
Yeah, so I will say this, right?
I am actually working with the astronomy community to try to quantify the effects and impacts of these
pieces of human stuff orbiting the Earth. And they do reflect sunlight. So in a sense,
it's light pollution coming from the skies towards the ground, towards large pieces of glass.
And yeah, when you look at the night sky, if you're in a place dark enough,
you're going to see more dots going across the sky than you did a decade ago. That's happening now and
it's not going to get any better. So I would say to you, a 10-year-old, what's his name again?
Abnish. Abnish. So I'll say to you, Abnish, the skies are not going to get less polluted with
time because we're going to keep on launching satellites. And so the night skies are going to be changing. And I would love it if you could, you know,
be part of the group of folks trying to find, you know, solutions to the problem.
So how about this?
Once again, we're admitting we messed up everything and we can't wait till the next
generation get older and fix it. That's all.
Yeah, the real sorry, Avnish.
Yeah, you're
screwed and we did it.
Basically, that's the answer.
So sorry, Avnish. You're screwed
and we are responsible.
We're responsible, buddy.
You'll find us in the Bahamas.
You'll fix the world.
By the way, you fix the world.
I'll be in Tahiti spending your inheritance.
So let me ask you.
What did you say, Morba?
Yeah, I know.
So basically, I was just saying what Chuck had said is that, you know, basically, I'm trying to quantify the problem for Abnesha's generation to try to do something about it, I guess.
Yeah, that's great.
I mean, you're really kind of a voice crying in the wilderness right now, my friend.
You are indeed the John the Baptist of space junk
because nobody is really paying attention to this.
So it's important work to kind of wake people up
about this issue, you know?
That's a second religious reference here.
Yeah, no, I really appreciate that,
but I know how John's story ends.
Exactly.
I was about to say.
That was great.
That was very funny.
Okay.
All right.
Let me ask you this.
All right.
Wait, wait.
So for the atheists out there, John the Baptist had his head served to, is it Salome?
Yes, absolutely.
Who ordered up his head.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Here we go.
Let me ask you this.
In terms of all this.
No, no, you're not. No. I can't ask any more questions? No. No. One per segment. Okay, go. Let me ask you this. In terms of all this... No, no, you're not...
No, I want Patreon questions.
I can't ask any more questions?
No, no.
One per segment.
Okay, go.
Here we go.
Here we go.
Here's the next one.
This is from Simaya Cosmica.
Okay.
And she says, which is the cosmic seed.
Are there noticeable effects caused by space junk
in the scientific astrophotography that
interfere with ground-based observatories?
This is kind of like what Avnish was talking about, but more on the more professional level.
When we look up into the sky, is there any research?
Is there any discovery that is being hindered because of all this junk in space?
And we got to do that when we come back from this next break.
We'll find out all the ways that space junk may be harming the professional community,
even if it's just another interesting object to watch from your backyard.
So on StarTalk, stay tuned.
We're back, StarTalk.
And we're talking about space debris, space junk, and it's the cosmic queries.
Just trying to find out what's going on and how and why.
And we left off, Chuck, with the question, and who is it from?
Teresina is her name, but she calls herself the Cosmic Seed.
The Cosmic Seed. Oh, very nice.
So I know at least this much, Moriba,
that these satellites that reflect sunlight,
and you can see them streaking across the sky,
that's primarily in twilight, when you're deep in twilight.
But once all of the sky above you is earth shadow in space, then they don't, the satellites above you don't see sunlight and so they don't reflect.
So can you think of another cost to night sky observing if you can't otherwise see them because
they're deep in earth shadow? Yeah, absolutely. So these objects in space,
they're getting heated up by the solar radiation
and also thermal radiation from the Earth,
if they're sufficiently low,
gets to where the satellites are as well.
And so when these things go in a shadow,
they're radiating heat.
And so from an infrared, you know, wavelengths.
Very important band that we use in modern astrophysics
because not everything just gives visible light.
So we want to be sensitive to infrared.
Okay, go on.
Yeah, so that's where these things are now emitters of, you know,
So that's where these things are now emitters of infrared radiation that then pollutes the folks that are doing IR imaging from astronomy observatories.
That is fascinating, but just something you really wouldn't think about because we tend to think about everything in terms of visible light, which is... Well, Geordi on Star Trek would have
seen it right away. Right away, right?
Yeah, he would have. Because he's got full spectrum
vision. Yes. Right. Exactly.
Wow, that is so cool. All right, so now there's
another segment. And this
is the same, you're allowed one question
per segment, Jeff. Now I get to ask the question. Okay.
All right, so
one of the reasons why we have all
this stuff in space is because they forget just the replenishment of outdated equipment, like new satellites.
They're doing something for us, like GPS or geosynchronous.
They're all doing something.
Communications, weather, they're all doing something for us.
doing something. Communications, weather, they're all doing something for us. What if, would it help if there were like a giant relay station? So you wouldn't put your satellite up into space,
you would connect to that satellite relay station that would serve as your satellite here on Earth.
So a geosynchronous...
A satellite hub.
A satellite hub.
Thank you, Neil.
So a geosynchronous satellite hub
that would allow you to, through lasers,
to connect anywhere on Earth.
So the satellite hub is all connected
and then on Earth,
you would connect to that satellite hub instead of throwing a piece of equipment in the sky. I'm making this up as an
idea that I just want to know, could that work? And Chuck, I'm going to tell you once I tell you
a thousand times, stay off the drugs. That's just a line from Coming to America, actually.
But go on.
Yeah, so more about what do you think of that concept?
Here's everybody doing independent things.
Well, maybe a lot of people want to do the same thing.
Right.
So I want to say that there's merit to your idea, Chuck.
Absolutely.
Oh, man, that was the best blow-off I've received in a long time.
He didn't have to finish.
He didn't have to finish.
He went with, there's merit to your idea.
In other words, that is the dumbest crap I've ever heard.
Would you let the man be polite?
Okay.
Be polite on the show.
No, so look, I think it's a great idea if you could get enough people to buy into it, right? But the thing is, nobody's been able to
kind of assemble this sort of consortium mentality behind doing something like that.
Everybody wants to, they have their own investors, they want to do their own thing,
they want sovereignty, full independence, yada, yada, yada. So people have thought about doing
this for Mars, actually. A Mars relay. A Mars relay. So, oh my God, now you just
opened up a whole new perspective
on space junk for me just now,
which is, it is
emblematic of
our greater problematic
disposition here on Earth,
which is... Wait, wait, it's emblematic
of our problematic... Yes!
Disposition. Disposition. Which is...
You had a sentence with those three words in it.
What's wrong with that?
Emblematic of a problematic disposition.
Yes.
Okay.
I'm just trying to follow you here.
Huh?
Okay.
I'm thinking of what you're putting down.
Yeah.
Okay, go on.
I mean, here's the deal.
The deal is this.
You know, we don't really cooperate.
I mean, scientists do.
But other than that, let's be for real.
Outside of like scientists on this earth, we are effed.
Nobody gets together and says, hey, guys, do you want to do this?
Or hey, guys.
There are four things.
Just to be clear, there are four things.
There's science.
Okay.
The Olympics.
All right. The World Cup. Okay. The Olympics. All right.
The World Cup.
Okay.
And the waging of war.
These are the only things that nations coordinate for.
I'm going to eliminate one of those, Neil, for, I think, obvious reasons.
I'm just saying.
I'm just saying.
But you know what I'm saying?
Like, that's so weird.
Like, this problem in the sky, from what you just, you know, said to to us is the fact that we're not
together. We can't get together.
Well, we did it with the space station.
Space station, except we kicked China
out of it.
And then they made their own damn space station.
Putting more junk in the sky.
Well, space station
is not really junk, though.
It's the size of a football field.
That's really cool, man.
Alright, here we go.
You got your damn question.
Now let's go back to Patreon. All right, this is Teresina Rojas, again,
who says this, because I like her
questions. Is there a plan underway
to remove this doggone Earth
junk, I mean, space junk orbiting Earth?
If so, I imagine it must be
really expensive.
Or is there a way to put together a plan so that someone could yield a great profit?
Ah.
So she's tapping into the real deal, which is how do we make money off of the space junk?
Because once you start doing that, everybody will race to remove space junk.
Yeah, that's how you motivate people.
So, yeah, any plans?
Yeah.
More about it yeah because it sounds
pretty hopeless well so so in order to like monetize the whole uh you know space garbage
cleaning thing a couple things have to happen first um for one i think we need sustainability
metrics like being able to say look here's this orbit highway. This is the carrying capacity for the orbit.
It's saturated or it's going to be exceeded. And so in order to get capacity back, we need to
remove some stuff, right? And then we could actually hire somebody just like a tow truck.
When you see a piece of some car on the side of the freeway, you can't just go into it and pull it off the road.
Right. We have tow trucks that come by and do that.
And so we could have the equivalent, you know, orbital tow truck company that, you know, gets paid to provide capacity back to an orbit.
But without that metric, it doesn't make a whole lot of sense because there's no rhyme or reason like what's the benefit of removing this object versus that one right so i got it you
create a space tax and that tax supports the cleanup to the beautification of the highways
right and that way every launch there's a little bit of money there that'll help get your ass back out of orbit in case you go dead.
Yeah.
How about drones?
Is there any way that we would be able to dispatch drones that would attach themselves to whatever?
I know these things are moving at incredibly fast speeds, but that would be able to safely deorbit them.
So the drone and whatever it is together, the drone would just drag it down to a place
where-
Well, normally drones have propeller blades, which require-
No, no.
These are jet-powered drones.
Jet drones.
Jet-powered drones.
Yeah, no.
Jet-packed drones.
Jet-packed drones, yeah.
They wouldn't be, you know, but they would only fire.
It wouldn't be, you know, but they would only fire.
They would be dispatched, but they would only fire to drag the piece back down to where the gravity would then take over.
I got it.
What about something like that?
Well, so here's the thing, Chuck.
I mean, gravity is always doing its thing.
So it's always there.
The things are always falling, right, towards something. But yeah, I mean, basically, you know, if you could have a satellite that attaches to something to bring it back down, there's several companies that have proposed something like that.
I think Astroscale out of Japan is one of them.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
All right.
So, Chuck, you do have some good – I'm getting on your case, but these are some good ideas.
Okay.
All right.
It's not bad.
All right.
Okay. Here we go.
Hey, this is Gary Marmel.
And Gary Marmel says, hey, Neil and Dr. Jha, if light photons can push and pull a spacecraft,
why not bring the laser for a ride? So he's looking at like solar sails. Why can't
we do something like a solar sail on the pieces that are floating up there as junk?
So you have an orbiting laser that you aim and knock satellites back down in a controlled way
for them to reenter and burn up.
And the coolest thing about it is when the laser fires, it goes.
The space laser.
Nice.
We have the sound effects already here.
You heard it on StarTalk.
Yeah, yeah.
No, so look, certainly there are a couple of groups of people that are trying to do something like that from the ground as kind of like a risk reduction, a demonstration of the ability of lasers to effectively remove some objects from orbit.
People in Australia and Canberra are doing that.
Some folks in Germany, you know, Stuttgart and that sort of thing.
So people are already looking at applying these lasers,
at least from the ground, to test that out.
But yeah, here's the problem, Chuck,
is that when you put the laser in space to do that,
people from a space security perspective
start having concerns because a threat
is something that has the opportunity, capability,
and intent to cause harm.
And so with a laser, you clearly have an opportunity and capability to harm something.
Then the question is, how do you rule in or out the intent of this?
If you can use it to push junk out of the way, then maybe you could do some damage to a working satellite.
And how would you know?
And that sort of thing.
So it gets a bit contentious.
Right.
Interesting. And interesting enough that you said that about the threat uh who's to say that
you won't use it to push my working satellite that's right disrupt my communication yeah yeah
right right right or maybe you did have good intent and then someone else takes control
that you don't have control over right so right So it's like someone steals your gun and then they commit a crime.
But it was your gun.
Right.
So.
Interesting.
Oh, man.
This is really a, this is quite the perplexing little problem that you have.
Because it's the Wild West.
It's crazy.
It's the Wild West, except it's space.
It really is.
That's right.
Oh, my God.
Okay.
All right. Well, let's. It's cowboys versus aliens except it's space. It really is. That's right. Oh, my God. Okay. All right.
Well, let's...
It's Cowboys versus Aliens.
Cowboys versus Aliens.
I saw that movie.
So did I.
I didn't quite know what to make of it.
Yeah, I didn't really like it that much.
Except for the scenes where the aliens were probing the humans.
That was cool.
No, the weird thing is they were mining Earth for natural
resources. Way easier
to mine an asteroid.
Why would you come
all the way here?
It's like Earth is not your best
supply of
rare ingredients. It's like passing
by 30 gas stations
just because
you want... You heard somebody, Joey filled up a handheld tank.
Exactly.
That's crazy.
Okay.
All right.
I'm really glad we debunked that movie.
It doesn't deserve it.
There you go.
No, no.
There's another one.
I heard a radio play of aliens who came to Earth sucking up the water because they needed the hydrogen in the water for them to survive.
Right.
And that person probably had only just learned that water molecule is H2O.
Right.
And they probably just learned that but didn't learn anything else.
Right.
Right.
The universe is 90% hydrogen.
Right.
Yeah.
Right.
Exactly.
You don't have to.
Let me find an expensive way to get the hydrogen, right?
Exactly. Exactly.
Exactly.
That's so funny.
Yeah.
It'd be like creating a big giant tank that allows you to breathe air.
Right.
Right here on the surface.
Absolutely.
All right.
Here we go.
Okay.
I think it's time for just one more question.
Give it to me.
Okay.
Let me give you this one.
We know Violetta.
Violetta is the 12 and a half year old. Uh-oh me give you this one. We know Violetta. Violetta is the 12-and-a-half-year-old.
Uh-oh, that's Violetta.
This is Violetta.
Brace yourself.
Yeah, we got to close the show out with 12-year-old Violetta,
who is also going to be an astrophysicist.
All right, love that.
At 12, she knows this.
And she says this,
I only ever hear space junk described as being a negative thing.
So this may be kind of a weird question,
but I'd like to think on the bright side a little bit.
Is there any possible upside to this space junk?
Like even any way to turn trash into treasure?
And then she goes, ha ha.
So clearly that's a 12-year-old's joke.
Okay. But go ahead. All right.
All right, Moriba, what do you have? OK, so to Violeta, this is a very good question.
In fact, one of the things that I've been proposing to NASA and other people is let's use the space garbage as a sensor.
And what I mean by that is this. Right. So, you know, Neil had raised this thing about non-gravitational astrodynamics at the beginning.
And basically, there's like four things that motivate motion of stuff in space.
There's gravity, and then there's everything else.
Everything else is like radiation, electromagnetic type stuff, particles bombarding different surfaces.
type stuff, particles bombarding different surfaces. And so space environment, space weather,
just like with earth weather, is very complex. But the thing is, just like we can tell how global circulation of water behaves based on following where the junk goes, like Chuck had brought up
earlier, we could understand what the space weather is doing by
following how it influences where the junk goes. And so we could actually try to solve the inverse
problem of given the behavior of the junk, what's our interpretation of the space weather and use
that for space weather science. Call me crazy. So these are proxy for like weather balloons almost.
Or weather buoys.
Yeah, absolutely.
Wow.
Interesting.
But just to be clear, when you say space weather,
it's particles from the sun that create what we could say solar wind.
That's right.
So the space environment has been, by recent decades,
has been known as space weather.
That's right.
And so, wow.
So they are all just corks on the waves.
Yeah.
As they bob back and forth.
So I'd like to use them in that way,
but nobody's given me any funding for that yet,
so we'll see.
Well, after they hear this show.
Exactly.
After we edit out the Chuck Perkins.
Right, right, right.
No.
By the way, now that you said that, I take back everything I said about Jeff Bezos.
I love you, Jeff.
I love you.
Cool.
Well, we got to end it there.
But let me ask, so Moribar, what's your social media presence?
Yeah, so basically, if you go to like flow.page uh forward slash morba you'll find
all my stuff there i'm on instagram twitter morba jaw and uh you know also on facebook and everywhere
else and so yeah i'm easy to find okay morba jaw m-o-r-i-b-a so it's pronounced as it's spelled
spelled as it's pronounced and jaw j-a-h. And Chuck, you're on social media? Yes, sir. At ChuckNiceComic.
There you go.
And I do, I don't officially follow you.
I have you on a list.
Oh, wow.
Or maybe I do follow you.
Wait.
Well, you better start.
I track you.
I don't know if I officially follow you, but I do track you.
How do you not follow me?
This is so disappointing on so many
levels. My
God, I've never been more
into it. I'm so into it. Tonight, I
will follow you. Thank you. All right, Chuck.
I think I already do follow you, though.
I follow Pee Wee Herman. And not
me!
Are you kidding me? Nice.
Yowza. Yowza.
Thank you. I'll get on a bar and I'll dance in some big shoes.
Maybe that will change your mind.
There you go.
All right.
We've got to call it a quick stay at Moore, but thanks for this.
You know, as more things fall out of the sky, can we think of you?
Yeah, absolutely.
So here's what I want people to do, right?
I want people to go to eyesonthesky.org, check it out, see what we're doing,
make a contribution if you're so inclined
and let's keep the love on being environmentalist
for the sky alive and well.
Because you can't love what you don't know.
Exactly.
Or you can't love it as deeply as you ever knew you could
until you have some kind of emotional,
psychological relationship with the cause.
So it's all good.
And continued success down there in Austin.
Thank you so much.
All right.
So I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist.
As always, bidding you keep looking up. y por qué no.