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Home / The Country

Debris from Elon Musk's SpaceX craft crashes on to Australian property

news.com.au
1 Aug, 2022 09:55 PM2 mins to read

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How a hockey stick prevented a robbery, four-day working week trial begins and the latest move from text scammers in the latest New Zealand Herald headlines. Video / NZ Herald

A 3-metre piece of space junk from Elon Musk's spacecraft has crashed into a farmer's property in NSW.

The object – which was part of the SpaceX Crew-1 craft – was found in a sheep paddock by a farmer living on a large property in the Snowy Mountains.

Farmer Mick Miners said he discovered the space junk, which resembled a tree from a distance, after his family heard a loud bang.

The bang was also reportedly heard by residents living in southern NSW, with some alleging they saw an explosion.

Neighbouring farmer Jock Wallace also reported a similar foreign object that had torpedoed into his land.

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Luckily for both farmers, the space waste – which came from one of the craft's fins – was located a fair way from their homes.

Mick Miners with the space junk that landed on his NSW farm. Photo / Mick Miners
Mick Miners with the space junk that landed on his NSW farm. Photo / Mick Miners

Upon investigation, Australian National University space expert Brad Tucker was called by authorities to inspect the object.

"This is most definitely space junk which was part of the SpaceX Crew-1 trunk," he told Ben Fordham on radio on Monday.

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"SpaceX has this capsule that takes humans into space, but there is a bottom part … so when the astronauts come back, they leave the bottom part in space before the capsule lands."

The spacecraft, which costs $62m per launch, has started to deorbit after almost two years in space.

SpaceX is an American aerospace company founded in 2002 by Elon Musk that helped usher in the era of commercial spaceflight. Photo / Getty Images
SpaceX is an American aerospace company founded in 2002 by Elon Musk that helped usher in the era of commercial spaceflight. Photo / Getty Images

Tucker said the craft was originally planned to break apart and land in the ocean.

"We saw most pieces land in the ocean, but clearly some hadn't because this 3-metre piece was speared into the ground from space," Tucker said.

"In photographs of the debris, you can clearly see charring, which you would expect from re-entry [into the atmosphere]. It is very rare to see because they don't usually land on land but in the ocean. People often think they find small pieces of space junk, but they would burn up on re-entry, so it's more likely to be large pieces like this."

The spacecraft, which is a stainless steel rocket, was more than 50m tall.

SpaceX is an American aerospace company founded in 2002 by Musk that helped usher in the era of commercial spaceflight.

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