With China situated where it is, this sort of thing is hard for them to avoid. Probably they want to eventually switch to fully reusable rockets, but that's a touch nut to crack.
Maybe I'm missing something, but China has an enormous east-facing coastline. Why not launch from Hainan over the Pacific? It's basically Florida but better-situated.
You'd have to build the rocket on the island, or transport the rocket to the island for launch. Neither is impossible, but it's a lot easier to build and launch from the mainland.
If they launched from Hainan there would also be benefits in terms of Earth's higher rotational speed. Some of the weight saved on fuel could go towards additional payload capacity.
The US program wasn't known for dropping boosters onto villages and dousing residents with hypergolic propellants in the process. While the US program did take a lot of risks early on it would be incorrect to suggest any equivalence in attitudes towards risk management.
> The US program wasn't known for dropping boosters onto villages and dousing residents with hypergolic propellants in the process. While the US program did take a lot of risks early on it would be incorrect to suggest any equivalence in attitudes towards risk management.
It would be correct to suggest equivalence of attitudes while we were nuking Navy sailors and Nevada hundreds of times, to say nothing of willfully infecting citizens with syphilis, etc, etc, etc.
Events of over half a century ago bear little relevance to events happening today, right now. You can't use the past to justify the present and the future.
Kinda not correct to compare the space program which isn’t the nuclear weapons program. If you compare the US space program to the Chinese Program, there no equivalence. If you compare the US nuclear weapons program to the Chinese weapons program, you might something more comparable, but China had some pretty wild and reckless testing. Probably won’t surprise many that many test occurs in Xinjiang and affected the Uyghur population.
What's your argument? That we shouldn't strive to be better today, because horrible things happened in the past? I guess it is also OK for china to genocide the Uyghurs, since the Holocaust happened.
No, because the Nazis are universally reviled. A more apt comparison would be the countless foreign invasions and "regime changes" done by the US, which resulted in millions of direct deaths and god knows how much indirect damage, since that is something that is not universally reviled at all.
Was that because they didn't do it or because reporting wasn't very effective in those days? Developing rockets isn't easy, things explode in unexpected ways and as the article points out it can be quite hard to control where a thing lands.
The US is not known for their safety culture, they screw up just as readily as everyone else. They are very well known for minimising its own flaws an throwing a spotlight on its opponents mis-steps. The US inherited the fine British tradition of effective propaganda and do a very good job deploying it (comes with the territory for democracies, really).
Seriously, "they didn't do X..." for a country the size of the US over the length of years we're discussing is meaningless. Proving a negative like that is not practical even in casual conversation.
Oh, silly me, I forgot that we frequently characterise the US by their 1960s era submarine program safety standards. My mistake. </sarcasm> I don't really know what response you expected, but one Wikipedia link to one program doesn't say a thing. It certainly doesn't sum up the US, who are famous for their huge fireballs and endless disasters - sometimes intentional, sometimes unintentional.
1. We don't know how the outcomes compare to the Chinese standards or if the difference is significant.
2. The US has a third of a billion people and the largest military budget. China has a billion people and the world's largest military if I recall correctly. There will be pockets of excellence in both. One example isn't anywhere near enough.
3. Before SUBSAFE they had a terrible record of unsafe subs, that is why they bought in the program. That is part of learning and it'll go the same way for the Chinese with their rocket programs - losing these things is expensive and everyone figures that out fairly quickly.
>The Soviets and Americans also did a lot of borderline and dangerous stuff when doing prestige and science.
the difference being that the cold war fueled novel R&D and science that the world had never seen; the Long March is a tool that was created as a means to chase after the capabilities of similar Heavy-Lift style rockets. The experimentation of the Cold War was fairly tightly controlled and limited in quantity; the Long March is supposed to be used for generally all space construction for the foreseeable future.
Given that this class of tool exists in the world already, all we can be asked to do is judge it against its' peers. They all have had accidents, but if the Long March is going to be known for spraying debris across the planet then this is a problem that everyone must pay attention to, regardless of where China has progressed to with regards to their safety culture.
We're not talking about Chinese safety when we're referring to space debris; this encapsulates the entire world.
Not just Bikini Atoll; America nuked itself hundreds of times too, injuring and killing perhaps tens of thousands, maybe more: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Downwinders
John Wayne is possibly one of the victims of this (inconclusive; besides getting nuked he also smoked like a chimney.)
China is banned from international space cooperation. They have to master space technology themselves because they can't rely on others. In order to do that, risks must be taken and sacrifices are necessary.
On a broader level, the Chinese think they made a mistake in not investing in science and technology for so long (read: the past couple hundred years). They see lack of science and technology as one of the main reasons why the were so miserable the past 150 years (minus the past 40 years or so). So they're not going to make that mistake again.
It's perhaps the "sacrifices are necessary" point that western commentators most disagree with. After all it goes against the idea of individual freedom. But China is very much a country that prioritizes collective interests over individual interests. This isn't even a weird thing on the world stage: most Asian countries have a similar mindset.
I can’t emphasize enough how not necessary it is to have the upper stage of CZ-5B reenter uncontrolled. Nudging the stage into the atmosphere while over an ocean is a much easier problem than launching the rocket on a precise trajectory to rendezvous with a space station. China clearly has the capability; not doing it is a choice.
Correct, an object of this size is almost certain to not burn up completely (and indeed it did not).
The same is true for other countries’ rockets, which is why those countries nudge them into the atmosphere over the ocean. China’s refusal to do this standard, low-tech mitigation is the reason for the outrage.
The amount of potential debris is roughly proportional to the mass of the object (maybe more than linear, since smaller objects tend to disintegrate with no detectable debris at all). A Starlink satellite is about 260 kg. The CZ-5B stage is about 23,000 kg.
It’s almost 100x the mass, hence 100x the danger (or more, since satellite-sized objects rarely have any debris) and 100x the outrage.
> China is banned from international space cooperation.
Firstly, China is not banned from international space cooperation. They have worked with several other agencies including ESA and Roscosmos. The only ban that exists is the US restricting China from working with it because of a history of their seizing and stealing of US civil space technology for military purposes.
> In order to do that, risks must be taken and sacrifices are necessary.
You can take risks and sacrifices without endangering the general public of your own country and especially without endangering the public of the world. China has the technology to de-orbit vehicles, they just refuse to implement it on some vehicles.
> They see lack of science and technology as one of the main reasons why the were so miserable the past 150 years (minus the past 40 years or so).
This is the myth of "chinese national humiliation" that is a common talking point of Chinese nationalists and is used to foment nationalist sentiment. Repeating it doesn't make it real.
> But China is very much a country that prioritizes collective interests over individual interests.
You can do that (with criticism) and endanger the population of your own country but you can't at all do that internationally. That's a ridiculous claim.
> This isn't even a weird thing on the world stage: most Asian countries have a similar mindset.
This is again completely false. Japan values the life of an individual at even higher levels than we do in the US. It's not an Asian sentiment. It's a Chinese Communist Party sentiment. (BTW this technique of expanding their own values to all of Asia is something that Imperial Japan did heavily in the decades lead up to WW2. Let's hope China doesn't head along a similiar route. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_East_Asia_Co-Prosperit...)
> This is the myth of "chinese national humiliation" that is a common talking point of Chinese nationalists and is used to foment nationalist sentiment. Repeating it doesn't make it real.
The idea has existed way before the CCP was formed. See the May 4th movement. Just because you don't want to acknowledge it doesn't mean it's fake.
Calling someone a "nationalist" just because you don't like the point, neither automatically makes that person a nationalist, nor does it invalidate the point.
It's also interesting how people say "never forget" w.r.t. WW2 atrocities, but when it comes to atrocities done against China it quickly becomes "get over it".
> Japan values the life of an individual at even higher levels than we do in the US.
You mean Japanese aren't known to do things that they don't like at an individual level, but still do because they feel compelled to for the benefit of the group? What do you think the phenomenon of not being able to turn down a boss invitation to group drinking exactly is? Why do you think Japanese has fewer problems with masks?
> BTW this technique of expanding their own values to all of Asia
Woah, now where does this accusation come from? Do you have any sources backing up your claim that this is what they're doing?
> It's also interesting how people say "never forget" w.r.t. WW2 atrocities, but when it comes to atrocities done against China it quickly becomes "get over it".
I don't say that personally, but you're completely misinterpreting the meaning of that. It's about making sure that any one (any country) doesn't repeat the atrocities done by specific countries in WW2. China's version of never forget is about a twisted sense of revenge about what was done to it, not about messaging to its own people to never repeat the things that were done to it. (In fact many in China seems to take the opinion that if something was done to China then it's okay for China to do it to others, which is completely opposite of the messaging you're comparing it to.)
> But please tell me why Starlink has uncontrolled reentry, and why there's not a similar amount of outrage against that.
Because Starlink is explicitly designed to be 100% demisable (burn up) in the atmosphere so it cannot harm anyone on the ground. Indeed despite there has been about 100 re-entries of Starlink satellites, and no debris have been found. That's why people don't complain about it to the same level. (Plenty of people still complain or invent reasons to complain, like that it's creating too much aluminum in the atmosphere, so it's not without it's complaints.) SpaceX has indeed had debris de-orbit and hit the ground, other than Starlink, and people have complained about that. They were also MUCH smaller than the Chinese stages however. You have to remember that these are some of the biggest single objects re-entering in human history. There have been only 3 objects that have been heavier to re-enter in an uncontrolled fashion. The bigger and heavier they are, the more debris are likely to survive to hit people or objects on the ground.
> You mean Japanese aren't known to do things that they don't like at an individual level, but still do because they feel compelled to for the benefit of the group? What do you think the phenomenon of not being able to turn down a boss invitation to group drinking exactly is? Why do you think Japanese has fewer problems with masks?
I explicitly was talking about the value that Japan places on an individual's life versus other countries. For example, to what extant a culture is willing to sacrifice an individual's life for the benefit of the greater good.
> Woah, now where does this accusation come from? Do you have any sources backing up your claim that this is what they're doing?
You were just doing it. You were extrapolating CCP values to all of Asia. That's why I mentioned it in ( ) as a side comment.
> In May 2020, two villages in Ivory Coast were hit by objects – including a 12-metre section of pipe – that appeared to have come from a Chinese Long March 5B expected to land that day
> [Dr Shane] Walsh [International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research: ]«They claim to have learned from the last two launches and added some method of control, but the EU tracking network showed this unit is tumbling, which means it’s not controlled»
> The US and the EU have embedded risk assessments and will not launch if there is a greater than one in 10,000 chance of causing injury. China appears to have a much lower bar
Some would have though from at least last episode in May 2021 that it finally appeared as clear that fatalist and jus-formalist orientations and behaviours are largely frowned upon.
China is a regional power vying for superpower status. To memory, nobody has ever been punished for fucking up launch and recovery. (EDIT: I stand corrected!)
> To memory, nobody has ever been punished for fucking up launch and recovery.
Canada once fined the Soviet Union six million dollars for crashing a satellite containing a nuclear reactor into northern Canada. The Soviets paid out three million.
To be fair, that instance was a crash of 50 kg of U-235, if which only 0.5 kg was recovered.
Apparently the controlling international instrument is the Space Liability Convention (1972) [0].
Ratified by the US, Russia, China, India, Europe, et al.
The only catch is you have to get your government to initiate a claim against the responsible government. E.g. Ivory Coast bringing a claim against China.
If there is any damage due to debris, they will be liabale under the Space Liability Convention 1972 to which they are signatory to. That will be the consequence.
Both USSR and US had in the past pay out due to this convention in the past. USSR for debris from a Kosmos impacting Canada, and US for Skylab fragments impacting Australia.
> The US and the EU have embedded risk assessments and will not launch if there is a greater than one in 10,000 chance of causing injury.
This may seem like a strict requirement, but the surface of the Earth is quite big (510 trillion square meters) compared to how many people there are (7.79 billion), so only about one in 65,000 square meters even has a human on it.
That video is incredible. "It's kinda incredible really having this piece of space junk fallin in me uhhh ... paddy. You know think of what else is out there in uhh other people's paddies. inaudible above my children's weird minecraft videos Yeh? I suppose you wouldn't fare too well if a piece landed on yuh"
Probably best not to get too close unless you know exactly what it is. Hydrazine is very toxic and probably carcinogenic. It would be cool to watch a reentry like that, but I don't think I'd get as close to the debris as that guy is.
It looks like it might be made of carbon fiber as well, which tends to burrow into bare skin when you touch it. I definitely wouldn't take a selfie with my hand resting on it like that guy.
I'm not sure they still do it, but Soyuz(?) used to have a radiation source on the bottom to use as a kind of altitude detector, so if one of those broke up there could be another surprise for someone who found debris.
It would have been marginally increased compared to what it got, however this thing is not a 20+ ton object like the Chinese stage. It's a few hundred kg. The western press hasn't cared about other re-entering Chinese stages until they start lofting entire main stages into orbit much larger than almost anything in history to re-enter. (The only things larger to re-enter uncontrolled were full space stations, which has only occurred a couple times in history.)
Any 'useful' payload would erase any plausible deniability. If the idea is to merely drop a piece of scrap metal on some politicians house or something, with no warhead involved, I don't think they can do that. Reentry is too chaotic for a piece of unguided rocket debris to hit a target that exactly.
How is "Chinese space junk falls on important target" plausibly deniable? Especially compared to alternatives that conceal source?
It sounds good, but I'm struggling to think of a use case for (1) an important enough target to be impactful, (2) that could be effected by space debris, (3) for which there's a distinction between "we accidentally hit it" vs "we deliberately hit it"
Yes they know what they're doing, but what they're doing is taking calculated risks. They don't know it's going to land in the water, and their rocket boosters often don't. They understand this risk, and accept it.
I am saying they know more about how this thing will fall and desolve than journalists or US defense organisations that have interest in drumming up fear either as a way to get attention or in a broder anti-China effort.
No they do not know how it will fall. That's beyond the ability of current known science of any country, let alone China.
The last time they did this, they put out a fake "prediction" of where it would fall immediately after it impacted to try to pretend to people that they knew exactly where it would fall.
Irrespective of whether the US administration wants to 'drum up fear', are you suggesting that China has a better ability to track orbiting objects than the likes of Norad (never mind the global mass of space enthusiasts adding-to and finessing datapoints)?
You're ascribing basically magical powers to China. I'm very doubtful that their space and solar prediction capabilities are so far advanced that they can predict the weather with the necessary precision weeks in advance
Nobody knows what they're doing to the degree of keeping people perfectly safe.
Too many variables in how this thing will interact with the atmosphere on re-entry.
Indeed. The stage is wildly tumbling through the edges of the atmosphere and the atmosphere is not continuous but "lumpy" with areas of higher and lower drag.
The Chinese don't have any control over this stage. It's tumbling in space (as seen by several observers). They know they're leaving debris in space, but they have no idea where it will land. They continue to lie to their own public and the international public on every launch that the vehicle is controlled.
There is a documentary named "Falling from the Sky"[1] from 2009, which depicts how scared and helpless people in a Hunan village were, every time a rocket wss launched from Xichang Satellite Launch Center. The village was located within the area where rocket debris would fall, and the villagers were basically told to suck it up by officials.
>Space junk from rockets launched from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in Russia ends up in the remote Mezensky District, where residents repurpose it for hunting sleds, tools and boats.
Definition of alliteration
: the repetition of usually initial consonant sounds in two or more neighboring words or syllables (such as wild and woolly, threatening throngs)
— called also head rhyme, initial rhyme
We had to learn alliteration in seventh grade US English class, where we were told in no uncertain terms that we would fail the class if we didn't master it with examples.
Another word in this category was assonance which as seventh graders we found quite useful for various purposes during instructional hiatus.
Guy is pleased he learned something new today, what you replied sounds a lot like a put-down. Just a few minutes ago I learnt of the satanic sounding Cacodyl Cyanide but i'm sure a ton of chemists are very familiar with it. Learn and let learn.
I can't really help not feeling bad for them. I think the Chinese people need a reality check. Hopefully this kind of movie will spread awareness. The people that should feel bad are those supporting the regime.
The CCP exists because the Chinese let it exist. If they want to have a fair society they'll have to overthrow it sooner or later. We can't do it for them. There is no other way. Even sanctions hurt the people more than the regime (see North Korea). People are nothing but livestock to them. Hopefully these examples will help teach the population to see what they really are. The people 'displaced' by the Olympics are another example.
It seems pretty popular still, but cracks seem to be forming after the heavy-handed Corona measures in Shanghai. I'm hoping it will sow the seeds of discontent and eventually a revolution will happen. Or a gradual move to democracy perhaps. But the tighter controlled a dictatorship is, the lower the chance of that.
Maybe I'm too optimistic but I think that dictatorships will always fall eventually. Even strict ones like China and North Korea.
And after the accident; the Chinese fixed their rockets and the Americans started their boycot; including banning them from the ISS leading to the space station program the CZ5B is a part of.
Today the Chinese space program is a source of national pride and is cherred and followed as the US space program was in its heyday.
The Chinese fixed their rockets using classified information that the American companies leaked in their report on the crash. This gave the Chinese missile industry a major advance in guidance tech.
In recent years the "cherred" (sic) Chinese space program has heavily borrowed without asking from the soviet and other world space programs to race through a checklist of space achievements the Chinese want to pretend they developed themselves.
For example: see Shenzhou 5's uncanny resemblance to a Soyuz capsule.
Now, to be sure, China hasn't cloned these 1:1. They have even managed to hit checklist items that the rest of the world hasn't got to yet, like communicating with a spacecraft landed on the far side of the moon. But foreign design bones are deeply embedded in their entire program and it's plainly visible to any that care to look.
Contrast this behavior to the US/Soviet space race where each side developed unique spacecraft and spacestation designs with unique abilities and unique degrees of success. With one exception: in the late 80s, on the verge of their collapse, the soviets copied the American spaceshuttle. They even made it better than the American version in almost every way but didn't realize that the entire concept was a huge boondoggle that was a mistake for the US to even develop and fly.
I still remember when Skylab fell to Earth in 1979. I was 9. People on TV who found items (and others who claimed they did by manufacturing junk with aluminum foil). It was inspirational. We looked to the sky at the right time to see what we could see. I wish I could share that with my kid, but he’s away this weekend.
105 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 155 ms ] threadWith China situated where it is, this sort of thing is hard for them to avoid. Probably they want to eventually switch to fully reusable rockets, but that's a touch nut to crack.
Sea launch or contract launch sites are good ways to avoid it.
* of course I see a military advantage where foreign countries can't recover your technology on failed launches...
Don't forget that China is still catching up. In the 80s, when it started developing, China was poorer than any African country.
The Soviets and Americans also did a lot of borderline and dangerous stuff when doing prestige and science.
Times changes here in the WeSt where safety is first. It will also be in China one day, too.
It would be correct to suggest equivalence of attitudes while we were nuking Navy sailors and Nevada hundreds of times, to say nothing of willfully infecting citizens with syphilis, etc, etc, etc.
https://www.ctbto.org/specials/testing-times/16-october-1964...
The US is not known for their safety culture, they screw up just as readily as everyone else. They are very well known for minimising its own flaws an throwing a spotlight on its opponents mis-steps. The US inherited the fine British tradition of effective propaganda and do a very good job deploying it (comes with the territory for democracies, really).
Seriously, "they didn't do X..." for a country the size of the US over the length of years we're discussing is meaningless. Proving a negative like that is not practical even in casual conversation.
SUBSAFE?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Thresher_(SSN-593)
Someone can convert that to 9's based on fleet deployment time, but that seems like an exemplary 60 year safety record.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sunken_nuclear_subma...
1. We don't know how the outcomes compare to the Chinese standards or if the difference is significant.
2. The US has a third of a billion people and the largest military budget. China has a billion people and the world's largest military if I recall correctly. There will be pockets of excellence in both. One example isn't anywhere near enough.
3. Before SUBSAFE they had a terrible record of unsafe subs, that is why they bought in the program. That is part of learning and it'll go the same way for the Chinese with their rocket programs - losing these things is expensive and everyone figures that out fairly quickly.
the difference being that the cold war fueled novel R&D and science that the world had never seen; the Long March is a tool that was created as a means to chase after the capabilities of similar Heavy-Lift style rockets. The experimentation of the Cold War was fairly tightly controlled and limited in quantity; the Long March is supposed to be used for generally all space construction for the foreseeable future.
Given that this class of tool exists in the world already, all we can be asked to do is judge it against its' peers. They all have had accidents, but if the Long March is going to be known for spraying debris across the planet then this is a problem that everyone must pay attention to, regardless of where China has progressed to with regards to their safety culture.
We're not talking about Chinese safety when we're referring to space debris; this encapsulates the entire world.
This seems a bit generous to the US & USSR - remember when we nuked the bikini atoll many times? (oops sorry about your homeland)
John Wayne is possibly one of the victims of this (inconclusive; besides getting nuked he also smoked like a chimney.)
It takes serious internal problems for the third or fourth person following to repeat those mistakes.
China is banned from international space cooperation. They have to master space technology themselves because they can't rely on others. In order to do that, risks must be taken and sacrifices are necessary.
On a broader level, the Chinese think they made a mistake in not investing in science and technology for so long (read: the past couple hundred years). They see lack of science and technology as one of the main reasons why the were so miserable the past 150 years (minus the past 40 years or so). So they're not going to make that mistake again.
It's perhaps the "sacrifices are necessary" point that western commentators most disagree with. After all it goes against the idea of individual freedom. But China is very much a country that prioritizes collective interests over individual interests. This isn't even a weird thing on the world stage: most Asian countries have a similar mindset.
And why isn't there a similar amount of outrage against Starlink? Genuine question.
Do all other countries' rocket stages burn up completely?
The same is true for other countries’ rockets, which is why those countries nudge them into the atmosphere over the ocean. China’s refusal to do this standard, low-tech mitigation is the reason for the outrage.
It’s almost 100x the mass, hence 100x the danger (or more, since satellite-sized objects rarely have any debris) and 100x the outrage.
> China is banned from international space cooperation.
Firstly, China is not banned from international space cooperation. They have worked with several other agencies including ESA and Roscosmos. The only ban that exists is the US restricting China from working with it because of a history of their seizing and stealing of US civil space technology for military purposes.
> In order to do that, risks must be taken and sacrifices are necessary.
You can take risks and sacrifices without endangering the general public of your own country and especially without endangering the public of the world. China has the technology to de-orbit vehicles, they just refuse to implement it on some vehicles.
> They see lack of science and technology as one of the main reasons why the were so miserable the past 150 years (minus the past 40 years or so).
This is the myth of "chinese national humiliation" that is a common talking point of Chinese nationalists and is used to foment nationalist sentiment. Repeating it doesn't make it real.
> But China is very much a country that prioritizes collective interests over individual interests.
You can do that (with criticism) and endanger the population of your own country but you can't at all do that internationally. That's a ridiculous claim.
> This isn't even a weird thing on the world stage: most Asian countries have a similar mindset.
This is again completely false. Japan values the life of an individual at even higher levels than we do in the US. It's not an Asian sentiment. It's a Chinese Communist Party sentiment. (BTW this technique of expanding their own values to all of Asia is something that Imperial Japan did heavily in the decades lead up to WW2. Let's hope China doesn't head along a similiar route. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_East_Asia_Co-Prosperit...)
The idea has existed way before the CCP was formed. See the May 4th movement. Just because you don't want to acknowledge it doesn't mean it's fake.
Calling someone a "nationalist" just because you don't like the point, neither automatically makes that person a nationalist, nor does it invalidate the point.
It's also interesting how people say "never forget" w.r.t. WW2 atrocities, but when it comes to atrocities done against China it quickly becomes "get over it".
> you can't at all do that internationally.
Not disagreeing with you. But please tell me why Starlink has uncontrolled reentry, and why there's not a similar amount of outrage against that. https://twitter.com/planet4589/status/1551434933285052416
> Japan values the life of an individual at even higher levels than we do in the US.
You mean Japanese aren't known to do things that they don't like at an individual level, but still do because they feel compelled to for the benefit of the group? What do you think the phenomenon of not being able to turn down a boss invitation to group drinking exactly is? Why do you think Japanese has fewer problems with masks?
> BTW this technique of expanding their own values to all of Asia
Woah, now where does this accusation come from? Do you have any sources backing up your claim that this is what they're doing?
I don't say that personally, but you're completely misinterpreting the meaning of that. It's about making sure that any one (any country) doesn't repeat the atrocities done by specific countries in WW2. China's version of never forget is about a twisted sense of revenge about what was done to it, not about messaging to its own people to never repeat the things that were done to it. (In fact many in China seems to take the opinion that if something was done to China then it's okay for China to do it to others, which is completely opposite of the messaging you're comparing it to.)
> But please tell me why Starlink has uncontrolled reentry, and why there's not a similar amount of outrage against that.
Because Starlink is explicitly designed to be 100% demisable (burn up) in the atmosphere so it cannot harm anyone on the ground. Indeed despite there has been about 100 re-entries of Starlink satellites, and no debris have been found. That's why people don't complain about it to the same level. (Plenty of people still complain or invent reasons to complain, like that it's creating too much aluminum in the atmosphere, so it's not without it's complaints.) SpaceX has indeed had debris de-orbit and hit the ground, other than Starlink, and people have complained about that. They were also MUCH smaller than the Chinese stages however. You have to remember that these are some of the biggest single objects re-entering in human history. There have been only 3 objects that have been heavier to re-enter in an uncontrolled fashion. The bigger and heavier they are, the more debris are likely to survive to hit people or objects on the ground.
> You mean Japanese aren't known to do things that they don't like at an individual level, but still do because they feel compelled to for the benefit of the group? What do you think the phenomenon of not being able to turn down a boss invitation to group drinking exactly is? Why do you think Japanese has fewer problems with masks?
I explicitly was talking about the value that Japan places on an individual's life versus other countries. For example, to what extant a culture is willing to sacrifice an individual's life for the benefit of the greater good.
> Woah, now where does this accusation come from? Do you have any sources backing up your claim that this is what they're doing?
You were just doing it. You were extrapolating CCP values to all of Asia. That's why I mentioned it in ( ) as a side comment.
Look at the dates on them, other than the Chinese stages.
> [Dr Shane] Walsh [International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research: ]«They claim to have learned from the last two launches and added some method of control, but the EU tracking network showed this unit is tumbling, which means it’s not controlled»
> The US and the EU have embedded risk assessments and will not launch if there is a greater than one in 10,000 chance of causing injury. China appears to have a much lower bar
(From The Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/jul/29/as-more-space-... )
Some would have though from at least last episode in May 2021 that it finally appeared as clear that fatalist and jus-formalist orientations and behaviours are largely frowned upon.
China is a regional power vying for superpower status. To memory, nobody has ever been punished for fucking up launch and recovery. (EDIT: I stand corrected!)
Canada once fined the Soviet Union six million dollars for crashing a satellite containing a nuclear reactor into northern Canada. The Soviets paid out three million.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosmos_954
Apparently the controlling international instrument is the Space Liability Convention (1972) [0].
Ratified by the US, Russia, China, India, Europe, et al.
The only catch is you have to get your government to initiate a claim against the responsible government. E.g. Ivory Coast bringing a claim against China.
[0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Liability_Convention
Both USSR and US had in the past pay out due to this convention in the past. USSR for debris from a Kosmos impacting Canada, and US for Skylab fragments impacting Australia.
This may seem like a strict requirement, but the surface of the Earth is quite big (510 trillion square meters) compared to how many people there are (7.79 billion), so only about one in 65,000 square meters even has a human on it.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-07-29/space-junk-found-in-n...
It'd be cool to get close to where this stuff goes down, but it's impossible. Just good luck.
I think seeing the ISS come down in the pacific in 2031 would be cool. Hopefully NASA will help rather than hinder this.
I'm not sure they still do it, but Soyuz(?) used to have a radiation source on the bottom to use as a kind of altitude detector, so if one of those broke up there could be another surprise for someone who found debris.
It sounds good, but I'm struggling to think of a use case for (1) an important enough target to be impactful, (2) that could be effected by space debris, (3) for which there's a distinction between "we accidentally hit it" vs "we deliberately hit it"
The Chinese know what they are doing.
We will see in a couple of hours.
The last time they did this, they put out a fake "prediction" of where it would fall immediately after it impacted to try to pretend to people that they knew exactly where it would fall.
[1]: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2136916/
>Remote Russians Recycle Rocket Wreckage
>Space junk from rockets launched from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in Russia ends up in the remote Mezensky District, where residents repurpose it for hunting sleds, tools and boats.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/26/lens/space-rocket-parts-r...
Definition of alliteration : the repetition of usually initial consonant sounds in two or more neighboring words or syllables (such as wild and woolly, threatening throngs) — called also head rhyme, initial rhyme
Another word in this category was assonance which as seventh graders we found quite useful for various purposes during instructional hiatus.
WSJ headlines tend toward puns.
The CCP exists because the Chinese let it exist. If they want to have a fair society they'll have to overthrow it sooner or later. We can't do it for them. There is no other way. Even sanctions hurt the people more than the regime (see North Korea). People are nothing but livestock to them. Hopefully these examples will help teach the population to see what they really are. The people 'displaced' by the Olympics are another example.
It seems pretty popular still, but cracks seem to be forming after the heavy-handed Corona measures in Shanghai. I'm hoping it will sow the seeds of discontent and eventually a revolution will happen. Or a gradual move to democracy perhaps. But the tighter controlled a dictatorship is, the lower the chance of that.
Maybe I'm too optimistic but I think that dictatorships will always fall eventually. Even strict ones like China and North Korea.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelsat_708
And after the accident; the Chinese fixed their rockets and the Americans started their boycot; including banning them from the ISS leading to the space station program the CZ5B is a part of.
Today the Chinese space program is a source of national pride and is cherred and followed as the US space program was in its heyday.
In recent years the "cherred" (sic) Chinese space program has heavily borrowed without asking from the soviet and other world space programs to race through a checklist of space achievements the Chinese want to pretend they developed themselves.
For example: see Shenzhou 5's uncanny resemblance to a Soyuz capsule.
Now, to be sure, China hasn't cloned these 1:1. They have even managed to hit checklist items that the rest of the world hasn't got to yet, like communicating with a spacecraft landed on the far side of the moon. But foreign design bones are deeply embedded in their entire program and it's plainly visible to any that care to look.
Contrast this behavior to the US/Soviet space race where each side developed unique spacecraft and spacestation designs with unique abilities and unique degrees of success. With one exception: in the late 80s, on the verge of their collapse, the soviets copied the American spaceshuttle. They even made it better than the American version in almost every way but didn't realize that the entire concept was a huge boondoggle that was a mistake for the US to even develop and fly.
[1] https://twitter.com/AJ_FI/status/1553425522369118208?cxt=HHw...
https://twitter.com/planet4589/status/1553438866203443207
China: "119.0E 9.1N"
https://twitter.com/planet4589/status/1553444872237027329