Alejandro Otero, owner of the Naples, Florida, home struck by the debris, was not home when part of a battery pack from the International Space Station crashed through his home on March 8. His son Daniel, 19, was home but escaped injury. NASA has confirmed the 1.6-pound object, made of the metal alloy Inconel, was part of a battery pack jettisoned from the space station in 2021.
An attorney for the Otero family, Mica Nguyen Worthy, told Ars that she has asked NASA for “in excess of $80,000” for non-insured property damage loss, business interruption damages, emotional and mental anguish damages, and the costs for assistance from third parties.
“We intentionally kept it very reasonable because we did not want it to appear to NASA that my clients are seeking a windfall,” Worthy said.
Seems reasonable to me. If I accidentally caused damages to someone’s home, I’d certainly be held liable. But, I’m just some guy.
So it was falling for three years
From my understanding, it was in orbit for three years before reentering our the atmosphere in an uncontrolled descent, then it fell through dude’s roof.
things in orbit are, technically, falling.
With style!
Is this true for everything in orbit though? Like, the ISS is in near earth orbit and so it’s absolutely just falling. But what about things up in a geostationary orbit? What about the moon?
Technically yes. The only thing keeping it near the object it’s orbiting is that objects gravity well. The only thing keeping the orbiting object from falling into the well is its speed.
Depends on your reference frame
Adding to @MaggiWuerze@feddit.de’s answer, an interesting tidbit: solar wind, particularly during more solar activity, blows (some of) Earth’s atmosphere all the way past the orbit of the Moon… so at some points in time, the Moon not only falls with style, but also falls through Earth’s atmosphere!
Being in orbit is just falling with style.
Yes
See I would have thought nasa would reach out when they heard about it and straight up offered to pay for repairs. This case will surely settle outside of court for between $60k and $100k
I love space stuff and NASA (one of the few truly great things about the US) but they really shouldn’t be yeeting things into orbit and hoping it takes care of itself.
🤖 I’m a bot that provides automatic summaries for articles:
Click here to see the summary
The owner of a home in southwestern Florida has formally submitted a claim to NASA for damages caused by a chunk of space debris that fell through his roof in March.
NASA has confirmed the 1.6-pound object, made of the metal alloy Inconel, was part of a battery pack jettisoned from the space station in 2021.
“This is truly the first legal claim that is being submitted for recovery for damages related to space debris,” Worthy said.
Officials originally planned to place pallets of the old batteries inside a series of Japanese supply freighters for controlled, destructive reentries over the ocean.
In this case, the negligence could be that NASA miscalculated about the survival of enough debris to damage property on Earth.
Finally, NASA could refuse the claims or make an unacceptable settlement offer—in which case the Otero family could file a federal lawsuit in Florida.
Saved 80% of original text.
This is a great way to handle a tldr bot. Excellent idea, bot author.
80k seems like a lot of our tax dollars for this. But who am I to say.
I imagine it’ll be pretty ballpark after they bargain it down. You start higher than you need to in these negotiations.
Ahhh good point.
Way less than the police waste on unnecessary military equipment.
I dont disagree. But waste is waste.