On 22 September, the three astronauts serving aboard the International Space Station (ISS) were ordered to shelter near an escape craft in the Russian segment of the station. Nasa had detected a large piece of space debris heading towards them and initiated emergency thrusters to avoid what it called a “possible conjunction” with the object.
It was the third time since January that the space station had been forced into an unscheduled manoeuvre, and once again highlighted the ever-growing issue of rogue debris in Earth’s orbit.
Earlier this week, space junk tracker LeoLabs issued a warning that another major collision could be about to take place.
Part of a discarded Chinese rocket and a decommissioned Soviet satellite were on course to pass within 25 metres of each other, with a 10 per cent probability of collision. Their combined mass of 2,800kg, together with a relative velocity of 53,000km/h, meant any collision would be catastrophic.