← Back to context Comment by recursive 1 day ago Not a given. Re enter the atmosphere. Sure. Avoid vaporization? Much harder problem. 5 comments recursive Reply reppap 16 hours ago I think it's actually the other way around, satellites need to be specifically designed to burn up fast in the atmosphere. See for example the warnings about space debris from Chinese satellites not designed with this in mind. debatem1 1 day ago There is some evidence to suggest that spacex knows how to reenter an object without burning it up. TheOtherHobbes 1 day ago The engineering overlap between between a small object designed for reentry and a flying (crashing...) warehouse is not a circle.Once upon a time there was a bonkers "rods from god" mass bomb idea, but that didn't work either. duskwuff 1 day ago Sometimes without even meaning to:https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatoon/spacex-cbc-debris-s... idontwantthis 6 hours ago 100 tons of steel will not vaporize before it hits the ground
reppap 16 hours ago I think it's actually the other way around, satellites need to be specifically designed to burn up fast in the atmosphere. See for example the warnings about space debris from Chinese satellites not designed with this in mind.
debatem1 1 day ago There is some evidence to suggest that spacex knows how to reenter an object without burning it up. TheOtherHobbes 1 day ago The engineering overlap between between a small object designed for reentry and a flying (crashing...) warehouse is not a circle.Once upon a time there was a bonkers "rods from god" mass bomb idea, but that didn't work either. duskwuff 1 day ago Sometimes without even meaning to:https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatoon/spacex-cbc-debris-s...
TheOtherHobbes 1 day ago The engineering overlap between between a small object designed for reentry and a flying (crashing...) warehouse is not a circle.Once upon a time there was a bonkers "rods from god" mass bomb idea, but that didn't work either.
duskwuff 1 day ago Sometimes without even meaning to:https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatoon/spacex-cbc-debris-s...
I think it's actually the other way around, satellites need to be specifically designed to burn up fast in the atmosphere. See for example the warnings about space debris from Chinese satellites not designed with this in mind.
There is some evidence to suggest that spacex knows how to reenter an object without burning it up.
The engineering overlap between between a small object designed for reentry and a flying (crashing...) warehouse is not a circle.
Once upon a time there was a bonkers "rods from god" mass bomb idea, but that didn't work either.
Sometimes without even meaning to:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatoon/spacex-cbc-debris-s...
100 tons of steel will not vaporize before it hits the ground