论文标题

寻找可持续空间

Looking out for a sustainable space

论文作者

Blake, James A.

论文摘要

1957年10月,Sputnik 1成功推出了地球轨道,标志着太空时代的曙光。 “同胞旅行者”中的第一个 - 人类的第一个人造卫星 - 在重新进入地球大气的前三个月绕过,尽管其任务为今天已经持续到今天的探索时代铺平了道路。对于许多人来说,一个没有卫星的世界将很难想象。作为一个社会,我们已经依靠它们来获得大量的服务和应用。卫星具有神圣的地球表面的神圣视图,以及在其曲率周围传递信号的能力,使数据可以在全球范围内快速传输,从而绕开了与地面基于地面的广播,长距离接线等相关的挑战。定位,导航和时机(PNT)卫星已经彻底改变了土地,空气和海洋的运输,而天气卫星使科学家可以在实时发展时监视和警告大规模现象。卫星扩大了观察的边界:向外看,天文学家能够绕过地球大气层比以往任何时候都更深入地看待宇宙。可以在一系列时间尺度上监视向内,进食一般循环模型的模式和过程,从而提高我们对气候变化的理解。卫星及其提供的服务不会很快消失。也就是说,确实存在对卫星安全的威胁,并且重要的是要尽快解决,以避免对太空领域的操作造成持久损害。从太空中的人类活动的出现开始了将近65年的时间,我绘制了轨道碎片环境的演变,并审查了使太空运营更具可持续性的最新努力。

October 1957, and the successful launch of Sputnik 1 into Earth orbit, marked the dawn of the Space Age. The first of the 'fellow travellers' - humanity's first artificial satellite - orbited for a mere three months before re-entering the Earth's atmosphere, though its mission paved the way for an era of exploration that has endured to the present day. For many, a world without satellites would be a difficult one to imagine. As a society, we have become reliant on them for a vast array of services and applications. With a divine view of large swathes of the Earth's surface, and the ability to relay signals around its curvature, satellites have enabled the fast transfer of data on a global scale, bypassing the challenges associated with ground-based broadcasting, long-distance wiring, and so on. Positioning, Navigation and Timing (PNT) satellites have revolutionised transportation by land, air, and sea, while weather satellites enable scientists to monitor and warn of large-scale phenomena as they develop in near real-time. Satellites have extended the frontiers of observation: looking outwards, astronomers are able to circumvent the Earth's atmosphere to look deeper into the cosmos than ever before; looking inwards, patterns and processes that feed into general circulation models can be monitored on a range of timescales, improving our understanding of climate change. Satellites, and the services they provide, are not going to disappear any time soon. That said, threats to satellite safety do exist, and it is important that they be addressed as soon as possible to avoid long-lasting damage to operations in the space domain. Nearly sixty-five years on from the advent of human activity in space, I chart the evolution of the orbital debris environment and review latest efforts to make space operations more sustainable.

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