I thought of this possibility when the frequent sky events began happening a few weeks ago. However, witnesses have recovered parts of the meteors and not parts of satellites in the debris.
With the increasing density of the satellite network orbiting and encircling the Earth, meteoroids are effectively prevented from passing through unobstructed, intersecting the path of the meteoroids that strike a satellite.
Is that your theory or has that been proven? There's a lot of space in space and although there's 25,000 or more satellites, collisions are extremely rare.
There’s actually a lot of documented information on this that can be researched. While space is vast, studies and tracking data show that debris and satellite collisions are real concerns for the industry ~ feel free to take your time to look into it.
Feel free to provide documentation on the actual number of collisions that have happened.
I am well acquainted with the Kessler Syndrome Theory but it's only a theory and has not happened as of yet. In fact, checking with Grok, he says there's only been one unintentional occurrence all time. And none with inner space debris.
On collisions? Confirmed ones are super rare—ESA's DISCOS database says just four cataloged events between tracked objects, ever. The big one: February tenth, two thousand nine—Iridium thirty-three (active US comms sat) slammed into dead Russian Cosmos twenty-two fifty-one at seven hundred seventy km up. That alone spawned over eighteen hundred tracked chunks, plus tons smaller. Before that? Mostly intentional ASAT tests—like China's two thousand seven Fengyun-one-C blowup (thousands of pieces still up), or Russia's twenty twenty-one Kosmos fourteen-oh-eight hit. But accidental debris-on-sat? Only that Iridium one stands out; others are anomalies or explosions, not direct hits.
I thought of this possibility when the frequent sky events began happening a few weeks ago. However, witnesses have recovered parts of the meteors and not parts of satellites in the debris.
It is interstellar material from that object 3i-Atlas. . Preddy good score if you can find it!
With the increasing density of the satellite network orbiting and encircling the Earth, meteoroids are effectively prevented from passing through unobstructed, intersecting the path of the meteoroids that strike a satellite.
None of that is too scale. The satellites in that video would be as big as some of the Hawaiian islands if it were
Satellite Tracker 3D (Real Time Visual) https://satellitetracker3d.com/
Is that your theory or has that been proven? There's a lot of space in space and although there's 25,000 or more satellites, collisions are extremely rare.
There’s actually a lot of documented information on this that can be researched. While space is vast, studies and tracking data show that debris and satellite collisions are real concerns for the industry ~ feel free to take your time to look into it.
Feel free to provide documentation on the actual number of collisions that have happened.
I am well acquainted with the Kessler Syndrome Theory but it's only a theory and has not happened as of yet. In fact, checking with Grok, he says there's only been one unintentional occurrence all time. And none with inner space debris.