Switzerland to Build 'Janitor Satellite' to Clean Up Space

The CleanSpace One satellite will approach a defunct satellite, grab it, and plunge into Earth's atmosphere, burning up during re-entry. Credit: ESA | NASA | Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, Johnson Space Center | Analytical Graphics, Inc.
The CleanSpace One satellite will approach a defunct satellite, grab it, and plunge into Earth's atmosphere, burning up during re-entry.
(Image credit: ESA | NASA | Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, Johnson Space Center | Analytical Graphics, Inc.)

Earth is surrounded by a cloud of more than half a million pieces of space junk, from bus-size spent rocket stages to tiny flecks of paint. Orbiting at breakneck speeds, every last bit poses grave dangers — and means huge insurance premiums — for operational satellites, and it threatens the International Space Station, too. Every time two orbiting objects collide, they break up into thousands more pieces of debris.

To combat this growing headache, Swiss scientists and engineers have announced the launch of CleanSpace One, a project to build the first in a family of “janitor” satellites that will help clean up space.

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