My debris field is bigger than yours
Each nation’s contribution shows up as a series of circles. A white circle designates active satellites, a gray circle indicates dysfunctional satellites and a black circle represents pieces of orbital debris greater than 10 centimeters in diameter.
The biggest contributor to space junk is none other than the U.S., followed closely by a two-way tie between Russia and China. Interestingly, China managed to contribute all that debris despite just having half the number of active satellites compared to Russia, or one tenth the number of satellites in the U.S. fleet.
Both China and the U.S. have tested missiles to shoot down satellites in the past, although the Chinese destroyed their weather satellite in a higher altitude that left a large cloud of space debris.
Fortunately, the U.S. government seems eager to avoid a WALL-E style future Earth if possible. The Pentagon’s science lab DARPA issued a call late last year for possible solutions to clean up space debris, and the U.S. military is also looking to upgrade its space surveillance capabilities to keep track of more satellites and prevent future collisions.
[We Love Data Vis via Fast Company]
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