Space-junk scout captures amazing fly-around footage of discarded rocket in orbit (video)

Astroscale’s ADRAS-J orbital inspection mission has taken all-around close ups of its target piece of space debris. The stunning footage of the 36-foot-long (11 meters) rocket stage was taken from mere 164 feet (50 m) and revealed no substantial damage to the object. That means the rocket debris is a go for a ground-breaking removal attempt that Astroscale plans to undertake later this decade. 

Astroscale’s ADRAS-J (short for Active Debris Removal by Astroscale-Japan) spacecraft has been examining the 15-year-old piece of space debris since February. The Tokyo-headquartered company has previously released a series of photographs revealing the 3-ton rocket stage suspended in microgravity above Earth. The new footage, released on Tuesday, July 30, captures the object from various angles while illuminated with sunlight of varying intensity. 

The images used for the videos were captured on July 15 and 16 during two fly-around imaging runs that marked a key milestone in the mission.

Images from a fly-around observation of space debris taken by Astroscale’s ADRAS-J spacecraft on July 16, 2024. (Image credit: Astroscale)

“Astroscale has achieved an unprecedented technical milestone for a commercial company: the controlled fly-around operations of the space debris — a rocket upper stage — capturing images from various angles and lighting conditions while maintaining a controlled fixed-point relative position of approximately 50 meters from the upper stage,” the company said in a statement. “ADRAS-J is the world’s first attempt to safely approach, characterize and survey the state of an existing piece of large debris through Rendezvous and Proximity Operations.”

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