INA- SOURCES
he International Space Station just dodged a piece of debris for the second time in less than a week.
Russia's robotic Progress 89 freighter, which has been docked to the ISS since August, fired its thrusters for about 3.5 minutes on Monday morning (Nov. 25) to get the station clear of a hunk of space junk.
"The debris avoidance maneuver positioned the orbital outpost farther away from a satellite fragment nearing the station’s flight path," NASA officials wrote in an update on Monday.
The burn began at 4:49 a.m. EST (0949 GMT) and raised the station's orbit by about 1,650 feet (500 meters), according to the Russian state-owned news agency TASS, which cited a statement from the nation's space agency Roscosmos.
Progress 89 performed a similar burn on Nov. 19. That one lasted about 5.5 minutes and ensured that the ISS steered clear of a fragment from a "defunct defense meteorological satellite" that broke apart in 2015, NASA officials said.
Low Earth orbit, where the space station flies, is getting more and more crowded these days. According to the European Space Agency (ESA), about 10,200 active satellites circle the planet at the moment. Most of them belong to SpaceX's Starlink broadband megaconstellation, which currently consists of about 6,700 operational craft.
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