100 FEET LONG 21-TON's DEBRIS FROM CHINESE ROCKET COULD HIT EARTH ON MAY 9th
100 FEET LONG 21-TON's DEBRIS FROM CHINESE ROCKET COULD HIT EARTH ON MAY 9th
Chinese officials say rocket remnants reentered and disintegrated near the Maldives
The debris from the chinese rocket has landed near the Maldives. It will soon be on instagram and covered by multiple news portals talking about how the rocket is 'giving us goals' and the rocket is 'setting the temperature soaring.
China says its rocket debris unlikely to cause any harm China says its rocket debris unlikely to cause any harm Debris from China's Long March 5B, which launched the main module of Tianhe space station into orbit, may re-enter Earth's atmosphere sometime this weekend.
China's space agency says the rocket should burn up on re-entry, though some experts warn pieces could land in the Pacific Part of a large Chinese rocket is falling back to Earth and is expected to crash on Saturday, possibly striking an inhabited area.
Nasa scientists warn huge tsunami waves will occurs if the Chinese out of control rocket debris will fall in to the oceans.
It's roughly 100 feet long and and would be among the biggest pieces of space debris to fall to Earth 21-ton debris from a rocket launched by China will unpredictably and uncontrollably fall somewhere on earth in the coming days.
Possible land-contact trajectories say the debris may fall anywhere near New York, the Atlantic Ocean, or even New Zealand Or in a completely different place. The path of this rocket that is described to be out of control in space currently is completely unknown.
