If you want to catch a last glimpse of Chinese satellite Tiangong-1, you better hurry. Circling the earth at a speed of 17,500 mph every 90 minutes, the 19,000-pound satellite will likely have vanished by the end of this weekend, to reappear as a fireball for up to a minute or more somewhere over the skies of southern Europe - or perhaps somewhere else.
While nobody can be certain where exactly the disintegrating satellite may literally fall from the sky - with pieces weighing up to 220 pounds expected to make it to the Earth's surface - the satellite's fate has long been sealed. And even if you miss this one, scientists say there's plenty more to come in the junk-strewn skies of Earth's near orbit.
First warning signs for the Chinese station appeared in 2016 when it failed to respond to commands by its operators. Tiangong-1, a name that translates as "heavenly palace," would eventually, according to my colleagues turn "into a man-made" meteor.
While the threat of the debris hitting a human is extremely small, the visual drama that might unfold over Europe's skies this weekend may only be a first glimpse into a growing problem that will manifest itself over the next decades, according to some bleak predictions.
The European Space Agency estimates that there are now more than 170 million pieces of space debris in circulation, though only 29,000 of those are larger than about four inches. While such smaller space debris objects may not pose a threat to Earth because they would disintegrate before reaching the surface, "any of these objects can cause harm to an operational spacecraft. For example, a collision with a (four-inch) object would entail a catastrophic fragmentation of a typical satellite," according to the European Space Agency. Smaller pieces could still destroy spacecraft systems or penetrate shields, possibly making bigger satellites such as Tiangong-1 unresponsive and turning them into massive pieces of space debris themselves.