Your Chances of Getting Hit by a Falling Satellite

67

By Greekgeek

Heads Up

NASA: UARS satellite. (Artist's Depiction)
NASA: UARS satellite. (Artist's Depiction)

1 in 3200? Uh Oh!

News outlets are spicing up a quiet news cycle with space junk. A dead satellite is coming down, and the chances of it hitting someone, somewhere on the planet are 1 in 3200. Thanks to those massive solar flares I mentioned last week, the satellite is dragging and is scheduled to fall early. How exciting!

Now, a probability of 1 in 3200 sounds alarming. That's almost the same as the chances of my doing laundry today (somehow, I don't think my jeans are in any danger of getting wet).

Luckily, that is only the chance of someone getting hit somewhere on the Earth, not the probability of each of us getting hit by a rogue satellite in a dastardly plot by God to collect on all our life insurance policies. No, God is clearly after Uncle Bob's life insurance policy.

So, what are the chances for poor Uncle Bob?

Well, 1/3200 is the probability of any human being being struck by this particular falling satellite. The population of the Earth is nearly 7 billion. Therefore:

3200 x 7,000,000,000 = 22,400,000,000,000

So the chances of your getting struck by this particular falling satellite are 1 in 22,400,000,000,000.

Not bad, but Uncle Bob might had better wear a hard hat in case God is loading the dice.

Of course, your chances of being struck by space junk will vary somewhat according to the size, composition, and debris path, but usually we don't need to worry — at least on the ground. I'm sure the International Space Station crew would prefer there were fewer pieces of space junk floating around.

Nonetheless, I'm amazed that the probability of the UARS satellite hitting a human being on the ground is that high. 1 in 3200? The Earth is enormous! That's an awful lot of human beings coating its surface.

Humanity is starting to resemble my overflowing laundry, with Earth as the basket. Unfortunately, I am afraid the problem will fix itself as we continue to shower waste and trash all over the planet until the probability of being hit by something we've thrown away approaches 1.

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Comments

ttagpine profile image

ttagpine Level 1 Commenter 8 months ago

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skylab

Skylab had a 7 to 1 chance of hitting a city with a population of more than 100,000, & 152 to 1 of hitting a human.

Greekgeek profile image

Greekgeek Hub Author 8 months ago

Yes, I'm afraid I'm being a little too flippant about space junk: it IS a problem we need to address, because there's astronauts and equipment up there which could be killed or disabled by it. I'm glad space agencies are finally trying to take steps to mitigate the problem.

Dinesh, I'm going to delete your comment and repost, if you don't mind, because I don't want to get in trouble for the article you copied and pasted into the comment box. It's an excellent article, but it's from another site, so I'm concerned about copyright.

Your comment:

OMG when that will fall i will catch it with my heman hands.

JOKES APART,

[Quoted article: "The Problem With Space Debris"]

-- http://www.philforhumanity.com/Space_Debris.html

I had voted this up and interesting.

With warm regards

Dinesh Nair

sparkster profile image

sparkster Level 6 Commenter 8 months ago

I'm sorry but the population of Earth is approximately 7 billion, not 7 trillion.

VENZKHVAM profile image

VENZKHVAM 8 months ago

I didn't know that but certain facts are universal so may be available in by itself. thanks for reposting.

Greekgeek profile image

Greekgeek Hub Author 8 months ago

sparkster: oops! *wipes egg off face*. Thank you.. All right, we're not that overpopulated then.

Venzhvam: when you copy and paste someone's words directly, it's a copyright violation. If it's something you know yourself, just say it in your own words. But thank you again! :)

Cloverleaf profile image

Cloverleaf Level 7 Commenter 8 months ago

Hi greekgeek,

Thanks for clearing this up! I'm off to buy a very good helmet which I will wear always. Lol.

Great hub,

Cloverleaf

Abby Lysach profile image

Abby Lysach Level 2 Commenter 8 months ago

wooo... those maths... well, I think the life insurance or a helmet would not solve the problem ha ha... thanks for posting it. Nice hub.

felicitylovespari profile image

felicitylovespari 7 months ago

One in 3200 chance of it hitting a human isn't too bad I guess. Watch out for those darn satellites. Knocking on wood.

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