Ground-based optical observations of the orbital debris environment
Space debris encompasses both natural meteoroid and artificial (human-made) orbital debris. Meteoroids are in orbit about the sun, while most artificial debris is in orbit about the Earth (hence the term “orbital” debris). Orbital debris is the term for any object in Earth orbit that no longer serves a useful function. These objects include non-operational spacecraft, derelict launch vehicle stages, mission-related debris, and fragmentation debris. NASA - Orbital Debris Management and Risk Mitigation
NOTE: right click and open image in a new tab for a higher resolution
Cusat 2 & Falcon 9 R/B Rocket Body (SATCAT: 39271) coming from south to north, followed by a SL-16 R/B (SATCAT: 23405 listed in McKnight Top 50) rocket body overpass. Observation date 23.11.2023. Images in order: original, infrared band and enhanced images. Full spectrum Nikon D7000. Exposure time 30 seconds.
[McKnight Top 50 - the 50 statistically most concerning derelict objects in LEO]