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An Iridium satellite and a dead Russian satellite collided on Feb 10 at 16:56:00 UST.
Debris From Satellites' Collision Said to Pose Small Risk to Space Station
They hit each other at an angle of 102.46 degrees, giving them a closing speed of about 11.65 km/sec (about 26,000 mph). That's going to leave a lot of debris.
It's not the first collision. An old Arianne rocket body hit the French Cerise satellite in 1996, plus there's been two or three suspected collisions between debris and dead satellites (there's a lot more dead satellites still in orbit than active satellites). It probably is the first satellite to satellite collision.
Cosmos 2251, a Strela 2M communications satellite (a really old satellite design - the first was launched in 1970, with the last launched in 1994.):
Iridium 33, a communications satellite:
Debris From Satellites' Collision Said to Pose Small Risk to Space Station
They hit each other at an angle of 102.46 degrees, giving them a closing speed of about 11.65 km/sec (about 26,000 mph). That's going to leave a lot of debris.
It's not the first collision. An old Arianne rocket body hit the French Cerise satellite in 1996, plus there's been two or three suspected collisions between debris and dead satellites (there's a lot more dead satellites still in orbit than active satellites). It probably is the first satellite to satellite collision.
Cosmos 2251, a Strela 2M communications satellite (a really old satellite design - the first was launched in 1970, with the last launched in 1994.):
Iridium 33, a communications satellite:
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