Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
Space around Earth has a lot of junk in it. This junk is called space debris.
Space debris includes dead satellites, old rocket parts, and small broken pieces. All of it moves very fast.
Space junk is dangerous. It can hit and damage satellites and spacecraft that are still working.
Now, scientists in China have a new idea. They designed a special net that can catch space junk and take it away.
- space debris
- old, broken pieces of things left behind in space
- satellite
- a machine that circles Earth in space and sends information
- spacecraft
- a vehicle built to travel in space
- orbit
- the path an object takes as it circles around Earth
- collision
- when two or more objects crash into each other
- capture
- to catch and hold something
- net
- a tool made of crossed strings or ropes, used to catch things
- tumbling
- turning over and over in an uncontrolled way
Level 2 — Elementary
The space around Earth is slowly filling up with debris, including dead satellites, spent rocket stages, and fragments left over from collisions. All of these objects travel at very high speeds.
This space junk is a growing problem because it can crash into satellites and spacecraft that are still working, causing serious damage.
A research team from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China has proposed a new way to catch and remove space debris. They call it a "net-membrane" capture system.
Instead of using a rigid robotic arm, this system launches a flexible net or membrane that can wrap around, or envelop, a piece of debris from a distance.
- fragment
- a small piece broken off from something larger
- collision
- a crash between two or more moving objects
- capture system
- a device or method designed to catch and hold an object
- rigid
- stiff and not able to bend or change shape
- flexible
- able to bend or change shape easily
- deploy
- to put something into position so it can be used
- envelop
- to wrap around and cover something completely
- remove
- to take something away from a place
Level 3 — Intermediate
The region of space surrounding Earth is increasingly cluttered with debris, ranging from defunct satellites and spent rocket stages to fragments generated by past collisions, all hurtling along at extremely high velocities.
This accumulation of space junk poses a growing threat to functioning satellites and spacecraft, since even a small fragment traveling at orbital speed can cause serious damage on impact.
A research team from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China has proposed an advanced "net-membrane" capture system, published in the journal Space: Science & Technology, aimed at catching and removing debris more effectively.
Traditional rigid capture methods, such as robotic arms, face real limitations: they require a short capture distance, struggle to adapt to "non-cooperative" targets, debris that tumbles unpredictably and was never designed to be grabbed, and risk creating even more secondary debris if a capture attempt fails.
- defunct
- no longer working or in use
- accumulation
- a gradual increase or buildup over time
- velocity
- the speed of something in a given direction
- orbital
- relating to the path an object follows around a larger body, such as Earth
- non-cooperative
- not designed or able to assist with being captured or controlled
- deployment mechanism
- a system or device that puts something into action or position
- adaptability
- the ability to adjust successfully to different or changing conditions
- secondary debris
- additional fragments created as a result of a failed or damaging event
Level 4 — Advanced
Earth's orbital environment is growing steadily more congested with debris, defunct satellites, discarded rocket stages, and fragments generated by past collisions, all hurtling through space at velocities high enough to turn even minute objects into serious hazards.
As this population of debris accumulates, it increasingly threatens operational satellites and spacecraft, since a single impact at orbital speed can disable or destroy equipment that took years and enormous resources to build and launch.
Addressing this challenge, a research team from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China has proposed an advanced "net-membrane" capture system, detailed in a study published in the journal Space: Science & Technology, that combines adaptive, flexible materials with a controllable deployment mechanism to envelop debris from a distance.
This approach is intended to overcome the shortcomings of conventional rigid methods, such as robotic arms, which require a short capture range, struggle to handle "non-cooperative" targets that tumble unpredictably, and risk generating additional secondary debris if a capture attempt goes wrong. By contrast, the net-membrane system promises longer-range capture, greater adaptability to unpredictable, tumbling objects, and the possibility of reuse across multiple missions.
- congested
- overcrowded or overly full, blocking free movement
- hazard
- a source of potential danger or harm
- operational
- currently functioning and in active use
- adaptive
- capable of adjusting to new or changing conditions
- controllable
- able to be directed or managed as intended
- conventional
- based on established, traditional methods rather than new approaches
- shortcoming
- a failure to meet a certain standard; a weakness
- reusability
- the capacity to be used again for future purposes