Space debris is the collection of objects in orbit around Earth that were created by humans but no longer serve any useful purpose.
Pieces of debris are expected to fall to Earth later this week, probably Friday.
A satellite, which was a space shuttle is launched 20 years ago, falling to the earth, is to do it the largest satellite of NASA in three decades. David Ritchey, a Saint Louis Science Center spokesman said: "It` s large satellites the size of a school bus, £ 13 000.
It `s still in doubt, no one knows where she` s going down and when. "It is expected 26 pieces of it will not burn after reentry into Earth's atmosphere.
The odds of a particular person is still astronomical ht, a 21-billion. But when you talk to someone on the face of the earth will beat the odds change.
Ritchey said: "The probability that each person is always a hit in 3200." St. Louis is in the collision zone very expansive. Astronaut Jeff Williams has been promt in St. Louis, Wednesday at Concordia University seminar in new book, "The work of his hands. a look at God's creation of the universe" He spent six months aboard the international Space Station.
Colonel Williams said he did a lot of space debris that threatens much more than the astronauts land.
Colonel Williams said: "We can not survive if we had the pressure inside the space station to maintain an atmosphere like this to breathe, so if something hit him or them in a hole or tear the thing he has to do his evil `. "
Pieces of debris are expected to fall to Earth later this week, probably Friday.
A satellite, which was a space shuttle is launched 20 years ago, falling to the earth, is to do it the largest satellite of NASA in three decades. David Ritchey, a Saint Louis Science Center spokesman said: "It` s large satellites the size of a school bus, £ 13 000.
It `s still in doubt, no one knows where she` s going down and when. "It is expected 26 pieces of it will not burn after reentry into Earth's atmosphere.
The odds of a particular person is still astronomical ht, a 21-billion. But when you talk to someone on the face of the earth will beat the odds change.
Ritchey said: "The probability that each person is always a hit in 3200." St. Louis is in the collision zone very expansive. Astronaut Jeff Williams has been promt in St. Louis, Wednesday at Concordia University seminar in new book, "The work of his hands. a look at God's creation of the universe" He spent six months aboard the international Space Station.
Colonel Williams said he did a lot of space debris that threatens much more than the astronauts land.
Colonel Williams said: "We can not survive if we had the pressure inside the space station to maintain an atmosphere like this to breathe, so if something hit him or them in a hole or tear the thing he has to do his evil `. "

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