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JacksonIn an unexpected celestial event, debris from a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket made an uncontrolled descent into Earth’s atmosphere, landing on private property in Poland, officials confirmed on Wednesday.
The sizable fragment, measuring approximately 1.5 meters by 1 meter, crashed onto the lawn of Adam Borucki’s warehouse in the village of Komorniki. The Polish Space Agency (Polsa) suspects the debris originated from a Falcon 9 rocket launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on February 1, as part of a Starlink satellite deployment mission.
Polsa’s Space Security Department reported that between 4:46 AM and 4:48 AM on February 19, 2025, the rocket component made its uncontrolled return, streaking across the night sky above Poland. Eyewitnesses across the country captured dramatic footage of glowing trails as fragments of the spacecraft burned upon reentry.
Authorities later discovered a second, identical object in a forest near Wiry Village, about 30 kilometers (19 miles) from the first impact site. Despite the startling descent, no injuries were reported.
Local law enforcement quickly secured the impact site, working with space experts to verify the object’s origin. “We are investigating how this piece of debris ended up on private property. We are aware that components from a Falcon 9 rocket were detected over Polish airspace,” police told reporters.
Harvard astronomer and satellite tracker Jonathan McDowell weighed in on the incident, stating that the Falcon 9 rocket’s second stage “failed to deorbit as planned,” leading to its uncontrolled return to Earth. He noted that the reentry path extended from the Irish Sea to Poland and Ukraine within minutes.
While space missions have revolutionized communication and exploration, the increasing volume of space debris poses growing risks. A recent study highlights the potential dangers of uncontrolled rocket fragments falling to Earth, particularly their impact on aviation and populated areas.
Polish space authorities are now working to verify the debris with SpaceX, which has yet to comment on the incident. As humanity ventures further into space, managing space junk will remain a critical challenge for the aerospace industry.
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