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this post was submitted on 16 Oct 2023
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Space, the final frontier
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I've been thinking about this for a while. All these starlink satellites are ^just going to burn up on reentry. That's like throwing tv's into the bonfire and saying "don't worry, they burn"
Every day multiple tons of micrometeoroids burn up on entry. So yeah there is a reason why no one really gave a shit when the occasional satellite burns up.
How many of those micrometeoroids contain petrochemicals?
If you think space junk is a major contributor to that instead of every landfill on the planet I have some water front property in the desert to sell you.
If we think of the 8000 tons on orbit, how much fuel did it take to get that there? How many rockets did it take? How many rockets just got dumped in the ocean? How much hydrazine did those contain? How much support equipment is involved in producing those rockets? How much raw materials? What happens when exhaust gets injected into the upper atmosphere? Is it the same as car exhaust on the surface? What happens when you burn epoxy and carbon fiber up there? What happens in a RUD and thousands of pounds of rocket fuel gets released?
If you think the space industry improves our environment, I wonder if you could spare some room up your ass for my head too. It's easier living in the dark, I'd like to give it a shot.
Your bonfire gets much hotter than mine.