I thought this was interesting. Apparently the same balls have fallen in Australia...
http://www.news.com.au/technology/sci-t ... PY.twitter
Space ball falls out of the sky
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Re: Space ball falls out of the sky
AustralopithecineOz:
Recently a Russian Federation space probe failed to respond to telemetry right after liftoff. I haven't seen any articles that confirm this is the probe that failed, but I think it's a pretty good bet based on what I've read about the orbit decay online.
Spheres are commonly used as fuel tanks and expansion tanks on most vehicles for all the right reasons and from the picture I saw online, this looks like a fuel tank that would carry something like Hydrazine (oxidiser) for the attitude adjustment nozzles. In the above probe there was also some nuclear material, glad it missed our patch and hit theirs. Just a couple random thoughts.....
My concern is (if any of us find one would be) handling it. Even if the contents are burned out from re-entry heat, the residue of some of the more exotic fuels is still very nasty stuff.
As an aside, it took about a decade for the major space users to admit their tanks would survive re-entry. This accounts for a lot of the rumour, disinformation and mystery still out there about these things.
It does make for a great story too!
Cheers
NoPolys
Recently a Russian Federation space probe failed to respond to telemetry right after liftoff. I haven't seen any articles that confirm this is the probe that failed, but I think it's a pretty good bet based on what I've read about the orbit decay online.
Spheres are commonly used as fuel tanks and expansion tanks on most vehicles for all the right reasons and from the picture I saw online, this looks like a fuel tank that would carry something like Hydrazine (oxidiser) for the attitude adjustment nozzles. In the above probe there was also some nuclear material, glad it missed our patch and hit theirs. Just a couple random thoughts.....
My concern is (if any of us find one would be) handling it. Even if the contents are burned out from re-entry heat, the residue of some of the more exotic fuels is still very nasty stuff.
As an aside, it took about a decade for the major space users to admit their tanks would survive re-entry. This accounts for a lot of the rumour, disinformation and mystery still out there about these things.
It does make for a great story too!

Cheers
NoPolys
"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts." - Daniel Patrick Moynihan-
"There are two kinds of people in the world: Those who can infer concepts from incomplete information." -unknown-
"There are two kinds of people in the world: Those who can infer concepts from incomplete information." -unknown-
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Re: Space ball falls out of the sky
Thanks Nopolys I thought is was strange it being a man-made alloy. So its just space junk? Its not a comforting thought knowing 1 m alloy balls can drop to earth not to mention the hazards from spent fuels and worse. Makes you wonder why News.com.au beat it up. Alien gods must be crazy... What a headline 

Re: Space ball falls out of the sky
Would have landed with less speed than a coke bottle.AustralopithecineOz wrote:Thanks Nopolys I thought is was strange it being a man-made alloy. So its just space junk? Its not a comforting thought knowing 1 m alloy balls can drop to earth not to mention the hazards from spent fuels and worse. Makes you wonder why News.com.au beat it up. Alien gods must be crazy... What a headline

Last edited by andrew on Sat Dec 24, 2011 10:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Space ball falls out of the sky

Cheers
NoPolys
"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts." - Daniel Patrick Moynihan-
"There are two kinds of people in the world: Those who can infer concepts from incomplete information." -unknown-
"There are two kinds of people in the world: Those who can infer concepts from incomplete information." -unknown-
- David
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Re: Space ball falls out of the sky
lolandrew wrote:
Would have landed with less speed that a coke bottle.

