Home » A Chinese Rocket Is Tumbling Back to Earth. Where Will It Land?

A Chinese Rocket Is Tumbling Back to Earth. Where Will It Land?

The Long March 5B, the country’s largest rocket, is expected to come down sometime this weekend, but where and when are difficult to predict.

A piece of China’s largest rocket is tumbling back to Earth this weekend. No one really knows when or where it will land.

On April 29, a Long March 5B launched a big piece of China’s next space station, Tiangong. Usually the large booster stages of rockets immediately drop back to Earth after they are jettisoned, but the 23-ton core stage of Long March 5B accompanied the space station segment all the way to orbit. Because of friction caused by the rocket rubbing against air at the top of the atmosphere, it has been losing altitude since and will soon make what is called “uncontrolled re-entry” back to Earth.

The chances that any debris from the Long March 5B rocket will strike anything or hurt anyone are slight but not zero.

Here’s what you need to know about the Long March 5B’s journey.

When — and where — will the rocket land?
The Long March 5B booster could re-enter Earths’s atmosphere anywhere between 41.5 degrees north latitude and 41.5 degrees south latitude. That means Chicago, located a fraction of a degree farther north, is safe, but major cities like New York could be hit by debris.

A piece of China’s largest rocket is tumbling back to Earth this weekend. No one really knows when or where it will land.

On April 29, a Long March 5B launched a big piece of China’s next space station, Tiangong. Usually the large booster stages of rockets immediately drop back to Earth after they are jettisoned, but the 23-ton core stage of Long March 5B accompanied the space station segment all the way to orbit. Because of friction caused by the rocket rubbing against air at the top of the atmosphere, it has been losing altitude since and will soon make what is called “uncontrolled re-entry” back to Earth.

The chances that any debris from the Long March 5B rocket will strike anything or hurt anyone are slight but not zero.

Here’s what you need to know about the Long March 5B’s journey.

When — and where — will the rocket land?
The Long March 5B booster could re-enter Earths’s atmosphere anywhere between 41.5 degrees north latitude and 41.5 degrees south latitude. That means Chicago, located a fraction of a degree farther north, is safe, but major cities like New York could be hit by debris.

Uncertainties over the time — give or take 4 hours — and location remain large. On Friday night, Aerospace’s prediction put re-entry in waters off New Zealand.

Because the booster is traveling at 18,000 miles per hour, a change of minutes shifts the debris by hundreds or thousands of miles. It is only a few hours before re-entry that the predictions become more precise.

What is the rocket and what was it launching?
Long March 5B is China’s largest rocket, and one of the largest currently in use by any nation. The country’s space program needed a large, powerful vehicle to carry Tianhe, the main module of Tiangong, the new space station, which is to be operational by 2024 after more pieces are launched and connected in orbit.

The full rocket contained multiple pieces. Several smaller side boosters dropped off shortly after the launch, crashing harmlessly in the Pacific Ocean. (Disposing of used, unwanted rocket pieces in the ocean is a common practice.) But the core booster stage — a 10-story cylinder weighing 23 tons empty — carried the Tianhe module into orbit.

In recent decades, rocket stages that reach orbit typically fire the engine again after releasing their payloads so that they drop out of orbit, aimed at an unoccupied area like the middle of an ocean.

China did not elect to do that for this launch, and so that large booster is now headed back uncontrollably to the surface.

Has this happened before, and will it happen again?
China has a long history of letting pieces of its space equipment come down where they may.

Rockets from one of its principal launch sites, the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan Province, routinely fell on rural areas downrange, occasionally causing damage. China has since moved many of its launches, including the Long March 5B’s, to a new site in Wenchang, a city on Hainan, an island off the southeastern coast.

Last year, the first launch of a Long March 5B rocket lifted a prototype of China’s crewed space capsule. The booster from that rocket also made an uncontrolled re-entry, with some debris raining down on a village in Ivory Coast.

With more large pieces of China’s space station scheduled to go to orbit, more launches of the Long March 5B are expected through 2024. Unless there is a change to how China operates it, the odds that someone will be hurt by a piece of a falling booster will grow.

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