14 points

Wood doesn’t burn or rot in the lifeless vacuum of space, but it will incinerate into a fine ash upon reentry into Earth’s atmosphere — making it a surprisingly useful, biodegradable material for future satellites.

Don’t metal ones burn up fine?

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38 points

No, actually. Metal doesn’t burn up, it melts to slag and disintegrates, but the metal particles don’t become gas the way carbon does. Then you just have a bunch of a space debris and reactive, aerosolized metal particles knocking around the upper atmostphere. Aluminum Oxide ash can float to the ground, or it can cause ozone decomposition. We’re not entirely sure which is worse based on the amount coming back from satellites, but the number of satellites we’re sending up is increasing rapidly. So it wouldn’t hurt if they were a little less toxic.

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9 points

For the most part, yes. The problem is pollution, like aluminum oxide.

Here is an article that explains better than I ever could: https://www.space.com/air-pollution-reentering-space-junk-detected

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8 points

Sounds like a radical achievement if they pull it off.

Nobody else could say they built a wooden space machine and put it into orbit successfully

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6 points

The dream of wooden pirate starships becomes reality!

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5 points

I’m curious what kind of fasteners they use

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11 points

Self-sealing stembolts.

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6 points

Probably dowels, maybe some glue. Doubt they would use threaded fasteners for a demonstration like this.

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3 points

Darn. Could have been big ammunition in the Phillips vs straighthead war.

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3 points

Ugh, Robertson all the way.

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5 points
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