Weatherwatch: Could global heating wreak havoc on Earth’s satellites? | Climate crisis

CHickeen Likken warned that the sky was falling, and now the climate crisis may be achieved. Carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are cooling and contracting with the upper atmosphere, although these gases themselves warm the lower atmosphere.
New concern now Even in the thermal cover In about 125-620 miles (200-1000 km) above Earth, where the International Space Station is located and about 11,900 satellites are located in the low-Earth orbit, with the number of satellites increasing rapidly.
With the thermal cover contract, it reduces the clouds, which pulls the satellite satellites and ancient satellites to low altitudes where they ultimately burn, removed from orbit.
But with less transmission in the thermal cover, more satellites are left in orbit, which increases the risk of collision between satellites.
The collision can give showers of debris that remain in orbit for decades or centuries, threatening a series of fleeing collisions with a lot of debris so that no satellite can work safely there.
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It is estimated that at the current rate of greenhouse emissions, the number of satellites that can remain safely in orbit will be reduced by at least half of this by the end of this century.