NASA has revealed that SpaceX missions-related debris may still exist. This marks a departure from the space agency's stance that debris may have entirely burnt when they come with a contact with Earth's atmosphere, as per a report Fox news.
NASA has said that five incidents have been reported wherein debris was detected. However, no one was injured due to the debris.
The United Nations in 1972 formalized an agreement stipulating that nations initiating a space launch would bear liability for any resultant damages.
In late May, The Glamping Collective, a company managing cabins on a secluded mountaintop roughly 20 minutes west of Asheville, discovered a fragment of a SpaceX trunk on its property.
An American family is claiming more than $80,000 from NASA after a small piece of debris fell from space and smashed through the roof of their Florida home, a law firm said last week, AFP reported.
The problem of space trash has risen in tandem with increased spatial traffic, and NASA's response could set a precedent for how future claims are handled, law firm Cranfill Sumner said in a statement.
On March 8, the object weighing just 700 grams hit Alejandro Otero's home in Naples, Florida, making a hole in the roof.
NASA later confirmed it was part of a cargo pallet of used batteries that was released from the International Space Station as waste in 2021.
Instead of fully disintegrating before falling to Earth, a section remained intact when it reentered the