Chinese space station set to crash back to Earth
China's first space station, Tiangong-1, which is now defunct, is set to crash back to Earth over the coming days in a manner similar to the final scenes of the Hollywood movie Gravity . Dr Brad Tucker from The Australian National University (ANU) said Tiangong-1, which means 'Heavenly Palace', was in an uncontrolled descent towards Earth and it will mostly burn up in the Earth's atmosphere, creating dazzling streaks of light in the sky. "It's highly unlikely that any of these pieces of the space station are going to land near somebody's house - you're more likely to win the lottery multiple times than have any of it get anywhere near you," said Dr Tucker from the ANU Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics. "But if you are in an area where you can see it, you'll enjoy a nice light show just like in the ending of the movie, Gravity ." Launched in 2011 as a prototype, Tiangong-1 space station's mission ended in 2013. At the time, China planned a controlled re-entry into the South Pacific Ocean. "The South Pacific Ocean is a spacecraft graveyard - home to hundreds of satellites, rocket boosters, and even the Russian space station Mir , that reach the end of their lives," Dr Tucker said. "Instead of ending up as large pieces of space junk, they are deliberately de-orbited to burn up and crash over uninhabited parts of the Earth." China left Tiangong-1 in operation until 2016 until its successor Tiangong-3 was deployed. "This proved to be too long and China notified the United Nations that they had lost control of their space station, and the decommissioned space station was slowly coming back to Earth - but they were not sure where or when," Dr Tucker said.



