This Is Why We Don't Shoot Earth's Garbage Into The Sun

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This Is Why We Don't Shoot Earth's Garbage Into The Sun
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It would be the ultimate method for solving our pollution or hazardous/radioactive waste problems, but we'll never do it. Here's why.

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Although these new technologies have transformed our world and improved our quality of life, there are negative side-effects that have come along for the ride. We now have the capacity to cause widespread damage and destruction to our environment in a variety of ways, from deforestation to atmospheric pollution to ocean acidification and more. With time and care, the Earth will begin self-regulating as soon as we stop exacerbating these problems.

The Mercury-bound MESSENGER spacecraft captured several stunning images of Earth during a gravity assist swingby of its home planet on Aug. 2, 2005. Several hundred images, taken with the wide-angle camera in MESSENGER's Mercury Dual Imaging System , were sequenced into a movie documenting the view from MESSENGER as it departed Earth. Earth rotates roughly once every 24 hours on its axis and moves through space in an elliptical orbit around our Sun.

Earth isn't stationary, but orbits the Sun at approximately 30 km/s , meaning that even if you escape from Earth, you'll still find yourself not only gravitationally bound to the Sun, but in a stable elliptical orbit around it. Bring enough fuel with you so that you can decelerate your payload sufficiently , and then watch your payload gravitationally free-fall into the Sun.

The Messenger mission took seven years and a total of six gravity assists and five deep-space maneuvers to reach its final destination: in orbit around the planet Mercury. The Parker Solar Probe will need to do even more to reach its final destination: the corona of the Sun. When it comes to reaching for the inner Solar System, spacecraft are required to lose a lot of energy to make it possible: a difficult task.

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