Title: Satellites, Debris, And One Moon
1Satellites, Debris, And One Moon
- To insert your company logo on this slide
- From the Insert Menu
- Select Picture
- Locate your logo file
- Click OK
- To resize the logo
- Click anywhere inside the logo. The boxes that
appear outside the logo are known as resize
handles. - Use these to resize the object.
- If you hold down the shift key before using the
resize handles, you will maintain the proportions
of the object you wish to resize.
- Robby McDaniel
- - One moon
- - Artificial Satellites
- - Debris That Orbits The Earth
2One Moon
- - Moon, Name Given To This Natural Satellite
That Orbits The Earth. - - Mass Of The Earth Is 81 times Greater Than
The Moon. - - The Moon Has No Water, No Atmosphere, And No
Weather On Its Surface.
3One Moon
- - The Moons Average Distance From The Earth Is
238,857 Miles - - It Travels At An Average Speed Of 2,300 Miles
Per Hour. - - The Moon Completes One Revolution Around The
Earth in Approximately 27 Days, 7 Hr., And 43
Minutes.
4One Moon
5Satellites
- Satellites , placed into orbit around the earth
and used for a variety of scientific and
technological purposes.
The first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1, was
launched by the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR) on October 4, 1957.
6Satellites
- The first United States satellite, Explorer 1,
was launched on January 31, 1958, and was
instrumental in the discovery of the radiation
belts around the earth. - In 1983, the European Space Agency began
launching from a space center in French Guiana.
7 Satellites
Communications Satellite The Syncom 4
communications satellite was launched from the
space shuttle Discovery. Modern communications
satellites receive, amplify, and retransmit
information back to earth, providing television,
telefax, telephone, radio, and digital data links
around the world.
8 Satellites
Major U.S. And International Satellites
9Debris In Outer Space
- Today, more than 9,000 objects are being tracked.
In addition, there are more than 100,000 bits of
debris too small to follow. Then there are even
tinnier particles slipping through space, and
they number in the tens of millions. - From paint chips and lens covers to discarded
space reactors and spent rocket stages, after
four decades of heaving satellites into Earth
orbit, space has become a polluted junkyard.
10Debris In Outer Space
- New data compiled by the Aerospace Corp.s Center
for Orbital and Re-entry Debris Studies in El
Segundo, Calif., found that more than 425,000
pounds of material re-entered Earths atmosphere
in 1999. - 84,000 pounds of that total survived
re-entry.Since 25 percent of Earths surface is
land, CORDS estimates that 21,000 pounds (9,500
kilograms) actually struck land.
11Debris In Outer Space
- On Jan. 24, 1978, a Soviet Cosmos 954 deorbited
and slammed into Canadas Great Slave Lake area
of the Northwest Territories. Making matters
worse, that radar-snooping spacecraft was powered
by a nuclear reactor. - In July of the following year, the U.S. Skylab
space station bowed out of Earth orbit. It
weighed a massive 77 tons. Huge pieces of Skylab
fell through Australian skies, creating visual
effects, even sonic booms, as debris passed
overhead.
12Debris In Outer Space
- To better help satellite and rocket builders,
CORDS welcomes any space debris that may be
picked up by the public. Understanding how and
why space hardware can survive the fiery fall
from space is challenging. - By recovering and studying space debris,
knowledge can be gained about how and why
satellites and rocket parts beat the heat. That,
in turn, can help manufacturers design in ways
that lessen the chance of future space hardware
making it to Earths surface.
13Debris In Outer Space
- The picture shown above, displays the amount of
debris (red dots) orbiting the Earth.
14Satellites, Debris, And One Moon