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“Broke through the roof and went through two floors” – NASA confirms space debris incident

2024-04-16T08:12:24.081Z

Highlights: NASA confirms that a piece of space junk from the ISS hit a house in Florida in 2024. The object is made of the metal alloy Inconcel, weighs 725 grams, is about ten centimeters high and has a diameter of about four centimeters. A pallet with discarded batteries from the International Space Station ISS could possibly crash in Germany, authorities even sent warning messages via the Nina and Katwarn apps. But the crash over Germany did not occur. According to official information from the US Space Force, the space debris fell into the Gulf of Mexico at 7:29 p.m. (UTC) A few days later, Alejandro Otero published pictures on X of an object that he said fell into his home in Naples (US state of Florida). He wrote: “Break through the roof and go through two floors. Almost hit my son” The topic is only now picking up steam, almost three weeks after the original post. The owner of the damaged house is still unclear what this means for him.



Space debris could have hit Germany, but it crashed into the Gulf of Mexico. But part of it apparently hit a house. NASA confirms the incident.

Update from April 16, 9:40 a.m.:

The piece of junk that hit a house in Florida and went through two floors was actually a piece of space junk. This is announced by the US space organization NASA. The part from the house in Florida was analyzed and compared with a pallet full of batteries that were dropped from the ISS in 2021 and which were suspected of being the origin of the space debris. After analysis, NASA believes it is part of the equipment used to mount the batteries on the pallet.

“The object is made of the metal alloy Inconcel, weighs 725 grams, is about ten centimeters high and has a diameter of about four centimeters,” says NASA. Further investigation is underway to determine how the piece was able to survive re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere while much of the space debris burned up in the atmosphere. What this means for Alejandro Otero, the owner of the damaged house, is still unclear.

Space junk from the ISS hits house in Florida – NASA analyzes scrap piece

First report from April 4th, 2024:

Naples - On March 8th there was great excitement in Germany: A pallet with discarded batteries from the International Space Station ISS could possibly crash in Germany, authorities even sent warning messages via the Nina and Katwarn apps. But the crash over Germany did not occur. According to official information from the US Space Force, the space debris fell into the Gulf of Mexico at 7:29 p.m. (UTC). “A few minutes later and it would have been Ft. Met Myers,” satellite expert Jonathan McDowell wrote on X (formerly Twitter) at the time.

But apparently not all pieces of space debris burned up safely or ended up in the sea. A few days later, Alejandro Otero published pictures on X of an object that he said fell into his home in Naples (US state of Florida). He wrote: “Break through the roof and go through two floors. Almost hit my son.” The topic is only now picking up steam, almost three weeks after the original post.

Object hits house in Florida – “I thought it might have come from outer space”

Otero tells Fox News

about

his discovery: "We cut our trip short to get home as quickly as possible because we really didn't know what had happened at the time and it was quite a shock!" He then describes the object that hit his house: “It didn’t look like anything I’d ever seen before. It looked like it had been burned and scraped, and it was a heavy piece for its size. I thought it might have come from outer space.”

Otero has very impressive evidence that the part that landed in his house could be related to space debris: a recording from his security camera does not show the crash, but it did record the noises. Otero read Friday, March 8, 2024 at 2:34 a.m. as the time stamp. “That's 7:34 p.m. UTC, which is very consistent with the Space Force's estimate of reentry over the Gulf at 7:20 p.m. UTC,” notes expert McDowell on Re-entry of the EP-9 battery range.”

Space debris breaks through roof of house in Florida – NASA launches investigation

The US space agency Nasa can also apparently imagine that it was part of the space junk that was dropped from the ISS about two years ago, only to burn up in the Earth's atmosphere in March 2024.

Fox News

quotes Nasa spokeswoman Jennifer Dooren in this context: “Nasa, in collaboration with the homeowner, collected an object on March 28th and will analyze it as quickly as possible at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida to determine its origin After the analysis has been completed, further information will be published.

Otero told

Fox News

that his insurance would cover the damage. In general, liability for damage caused by space debris is regulated in the United Nations Outer Space Treaty: the country that owns the space debris must pay for the damage. But with the battery pack from the ISS, things could be a little more complicated: As

Ars Technica

reports, the batteries belonged to NASA, but they were mounted on a structure that was launched into space by the Japanese space agency Jaxa.

The person concerned wants to discuss responsible space travel

Otero himself sees the matter very rationally after the initial shock: “This is such an amazing event that we all have to stop and think about the future,” said the person concerned on

Fox News

. “We have a good starting point for a discussion about how to approach space travel responsibly, because this near miss is a warning sign for the space community.”

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Source: merkur

All news articles on 2024-04-16

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