http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/07/080709153152.htm


Swerve Left To Avoid That Satellite: The Growing Issue Of Space Debris

Science Daily

July 10, 2008



Think you have trouble getting rid of the clutter in your living room? 
After more than 50 years of launching rockets and satellites into space, 
the human race now has to deal with the clutter left behind -- or is it 
"above"? Dead satellites, spent rocket stages, paint flakes, and coolant 
from nuclear-powered satellites continue to orbit the Earth at ultrahigh 
velocities.

It's a serious subject. Space debris threatens the lives of astronauts and 
the launch of new satellites today, says Dr. Noam Eliaz, Head of the 
Biomaterials and Corrosion Laboratory at the School of Mechanical 
Engineering at Tel Aviv University. An expert in materials science and 
engineering, Dr. Eliaz is working with a team at Soreq NRC to create and 
test new materials to make the heavens safer for satellites and astronauts 
alike.

Hazards in Space

The oldest piece of "space junk" is the U.S. satellite Vanguard I, launched 
in 1958 and still in orbit. "Space debris has become a major concern 
recently, since collisions with such debris at ultrahigh velocities could 
be a disaster for spacecraft that pass through Earth's orbit," says Dr. 
Eliaz. "An impact could be catastrophic."

Eliaz says that the combined effects of other components in the space 
environment, such as atomic oxygen, might increase the damage. The 
researcher, a past Fulbright and Rothschild scholar at MIT, is 
investigating new kinds of materials that could be used on spacecraft 
surfaces to protect against such hazards.

Finding an Answer in Materials Science

Eliaz is developing nano-based materials with special mechanical 
properties, such as high strength and wear resistance, and controllable 
electrical and thermal properties. "This could lead to a superior material 
for the external blankets of spacecraft," says Eliaz, whose research has 
already been put to use by top biomedical device companies and by aircraft 
industries worldwide.

One candidate Eliaz and his colleagues have investigated is a hybrid 
nanomaterial which incorporates small silicon-containing cages that can 
open and react with atomic oxygen to prevent further polymer degradation.

The team includes Dr. Eitan Grossman, Head of the Materials Group within 
the Space Environment Section at Soreq NRC in Israel, and his staff Dr. 
Irina Gouzman and Ronen Verker, the latter also a Ph.D. student at TAU. 
Recent research by Eliaz and his colleagues at Soreq has been published in 
the journals Acta Materialia, Polymer and High Performance Polymers.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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