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Project Information

ID: 317185

Start date

01-02-2013

End date

31-01-2017


Institutional Coordinator
Polytechnic University of Madrid

Financing

248 165,72 Euros
(Total amount or amount awarded)

More information in

Scope

Internacional no UE

Country

Belgium; Italy; Spain; United Kingdom

Analysis of institutional authors

Pelaez Alvarez, JesusParticipantUrrutxua Cereijo, HodeiParticipantBombardelli, ClaudioPrincipal investigator

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March 16, 2021
R&D Projects
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Competitive project
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Stardust-The Asteroid and Space Debris Network

Researchers:

BOMBARDELLI, CLAUDIO (Investigador principal (IP)); URRUTXUA CEREIJO, HODEI (Participante); PELAEZ ALVAREZ, JESUS (Participante)
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Related entities

ASTRONOMSKA OPSERVATORIJA - Participant
CONSIGLIO NAZIONALE DELLE RICERCHE - Participant
Deimos Space S.L.U. - Participant
DFKI - Deutsches Forschungszentrum Fuer Kuenstliche Intelligenz GmbH - Participant
Dinamica Srl - Participant
Universidad Politécnica de Madrid - Participant
Universita di Pisa - Participant
Universita di Roma Tor Vergata - Participant
University of Southampton - Participant
See more

Quality index

Call

FP7

Financer

Comisión Europea

Institutional Coordinator

Si

Most relevant results

Asteroids and space debris represent a significant hazard for space and terrestrial assets; at the same time asteroids represent also an opportunity. In recent years it has become clear that the increasing population of space debris could lead to catastrophic consequences in the near term. The Kessler syndrome (where the density of objects in orbit is high enough that collisions could set off a cascade) is more realistic than when it was first proposed in 1978. Although statistically less likely to occur, an asteroid impact would have devastating consequences for our planet. Although an impact with a large (~10 km) to medium (~300 m) sized, or diameter, asteroid is unlikely, still it is not negligible as the recent case of the asteroid Apophis has demonstrated. Furthermore impacts with smaller size objects, between 10 m to 100 m diameter, are expected to occur more frequently and hence are, proportionally, equally dangerous for humans and assets on Earth and in space. Asteroids and space debris share a number of commonalities: both are uncontrolled objects whose orbit is deeply affected by a number of perturbations, both have an irregular shape and an uncertain attitude motion, both are made of inhomogeneous materials that can respond unexpectedly to a deflection action, for both, accurate orbit determination is required, both need to be removed before they impact with something valuable for us. The observation, manipulation and disposal of space debris and asteroids represent one of the most challenging goals for modern space technology. It represents a key scientific and commercial venture for the future in order to protect the space and Earth environment. Such a significant multidisciplinary technical challenge, with real societal benefit for the future, represents a compelling topic for a training network.