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Retired NASA Satellite Crashing Back to Earth Today

The 5,400-pound Earth Radiation Budget Satellite (ERBS) is predicted to re-enter the atmosphere at approximately 6:40 p.m. EST today, give or take 17 hours.

January 8, 2023
(Credit: NASA)

A retired NASA satellite that spent almost four decades in space and studied how our planet absorbs and radiates solar energy is set to crash back into Earth today, NASA announced

The 5,400-pound Earth Radiation Budget Satellite (ERBS) is predicted by NASA to reenter the atmosphere at approximately 6:40 p.m. EST today, give or take 17 hours.

If you’re suddenly looking up to the sky with concern, there’s little need to worry: NASA has stated the risk of harm coming to anyone is extremely low—approximately 1 in 9,400. 

The satellite came into service after being launched from the ill-fated Space Shuttle Challenger on Oct. 5 1984 and it operated until retirement in 2005, far beyond its expected two-year service life. It is expected to mostly burn up upon its re-entry. 

ERBS was part of a three-satellite Earth Radiation Budget Experiment mission and it made measurements of stratospheric ozone, water vapor, nitrogen oxide, and aerosols, which helped researchers to measure the effects of human activities on Earth’s radiation balance. 

The satellite collected important data that showed the Earth’s ozone layer was declining globally. It was this data that was used to help shape the international Montreal Protocol Agreement, which resulted in a dramatic decrease in the use of ozone-destroying chlorofluorocarbons, NASA said in its announcement.

ERBS was notably released from the Space Shuttle Challenger’s cargo hold by Sally Ride, the first American woman astronaut to fly in space. She released it using the spacecraft’s robotic arm. 

Earlier this year, two 23-ton heavy Chinese Long March 5B rocket cores crashed back into Earth uncontrolled, with the first coming down in July and the second in November. The rockets carried the final modules for China’s Tiangong Space station, which is now complete.

While there was initial confusion over where the second rocket would land, it fell safely into the south-central Pacific Ocean.

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About Marco Marcelline

Contributor

I am interested in how technology and human rights intersect, and how technology shapes cultural trends. I have a master's degree in Investigative Journalism from City University London.

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