Updated
Updated · ZME Science · Jun 25
Tokyo Researchers Simulate 4-Gram Origami Plane Reentry From 400 Km, Eyeing Atmospheric Sensing
Updated
Updated · ZME Science · Jun 25

Tokyo Researchers Simulate 4-Gram Origami Plane Reentry From 400 Km, Eyeing Atmospheric Sensing

1 articles · Updated · ZME Science · Jun 25

Summary

  • A University of Tokyo team modeled an origami paper plane released from the ISS and found it could stay passively stable for several days before burning up during reentry.
  • At about 120 km altitude after roughly four days, thicker air would make the 4-gram craft tumble uncontrollably, with heating expected to trigger combustion or pyrolysis.
  • Mach 7 wind-tunnel tests on a scaled model backed the simulations: the nose bent into a 3 mm ridge, the tip darkened and wing edges charred, though the plane briefly held together.
  • The researchers argue such low-mass, high-drag designs could serve as passive probes of air density at 200-300 km, a hard-to-measure region, while also pointing to cleaner disposal concepts for lightweight space hardware.

Insights

How can a burning paper plane, designed as space trash, actually help protect billion-dollar satellites from collision?
Can a simple paper plane concept realistically help clear the 15,000 tonnes of junk currently orbiting our planet?