Go Back
Fox News
Move Back
ADVERTISEMENT
Skip
Published
November 11, 2014
7 Images
Forty-Four Years of Space Junk
Orbital debris through the years
Start Slideshow
A NASA diagram of the thousands of man-made objects, 95 percent of which are junk, orbiting the Earth in both low and geosynchronous orbits.
read more
NASA
Share
Sept. 14, 2006: NASA scientist Mark Matney seen through a fist-sized hole punched through a 3-inch sheet of aluminum in a space-junk impact test.
read more
AP
Share
June 1965: Ed White, first American to walk in space, and first to lose something while doing it. He died in the Apollo 1 fire 19 months later.
read more
NASA
Share
Skylab, seen by astronauts leaving it in Feb. 1974. It then became the largest piece of space junk until it crashed to Earth five years later.
read more
NASA
Share
A scanning-electron microscope image of a high-velocity particle impact incurred in orbit on a window of space shuttle Columbia in 1992.
read more
NASA
Share
Sept. 14, 2006: The white arrow points to damage caused by a tiny piece of space junk on a solar panel from the Russian space station Mir.
read more
AP
Share
A NASA illustration of all objects, 95 percent of which are junk, in low-Earth orbit.
read more
NASA
Share
Published
November 11, 2014
7 Images
Forty-Four Years of Space Junk
Orbital debris through the years
Start Over
Share Slideshow
Published on
Published on
Published on
See More Slideshows
Move Forward
Forty-Four Years of Space Junk
Close
Share this Slideshow
Share this slide
Share Entire Slideshow
Facebook
Twitter
Email
Link