Avoiding space trash is crucial for the International Space Station (ISS), which is the largest satellite in space. “Twenty-four hours a day, it’s someone’s job to protect the ISS from orbital debris,” says Shane Cowen, an orbital analyst who works with NASA to track the ISS (see Protecting the “Pizza Box,” below).
In fact, 95 percent of space trash is too small to be tracked. NASA estimates that more than 100 million pieces of space debris are smaller than 1 centimeter. This tiny space junk includes everything from flecks of paint to stray screws. Most of it is from existing junk smashing into even smaller pieces.
Although large space trash hitting Earth is extremely rare, Cowen says that “the more objects there are in space, the more chance there is to interfere with satellite communications.”