What is Nostr?
Prof. Sam Lawler /
npub1dls…hn0x
2023-12-15 00:54:35
in reply to nevent1q…q3aw

Prof. Sam Lawler on Nostr: npub1e0sg4…an6zr npub1j7t97…gls96 npub1asa7z…en9sr npub1ccn4e…6czwu At 550 km ...

npub1e0sg4hfxaeu67vmpx2vfedru765lyw35yp7t4r7uhwswra3hxzsqjan6zr (npub1e0s…n6zr) npub1j7t9753lqsyyjq8s7w4h8zu0dvnyvdw4rwdkr3lmglxw7fralr3sngls96 (npub1j7t…ls96) npub1asa7zhxq92arr7z3dqywvsh0ur24a9k6qmkg2zcthe0wshyu9pvsren9sr (npub1asa…n9sr) npub1ccn4ec2s2dmhzu4cthwhy56hcsswk4z3j3kvhlhuvp96phm9zjrqj6czwu (npub1ccn…czwu) At 550 km it's more like a few decades-centuries to "naturally" deorbit, especially for big things (like sats) on circular orbits. They plan to burn them all up in the atmosphere. Many tons of weird computer parts and aluminum frame and solar panels deposited in the upper atmosphere every day. What could go wrong? It's not regulated, so nobody knows.

Oh look, we're already detecting it: https://www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.2313374120
Author Public Key
npub1dls3fr60k92efj3980hthkhjdgcqky8jawpg9tcqmkvd68dt70esy7hn0x