Using Artemis II Earth images shared on Bluesky, the composite shows many sunlit objects near the planet, with catalogues estimating roughly 33,484 to 50,600 objects currently in orbit.
Most are in low Earth orbit below 2,000km, and one Space Force-based visualisation excluding debris suggests objects there have nearly tripled since 2020, rising from 6,068 to 16,084.
The report says the growing clutter complicates launch planning and raises collision risks, because even tiny debris travelling at orbital speeds can cause severe damage or catastrophic on-orbit impacts.
As satellites threaten to blind our telescopes, are we trading cosmic discovery for global internet connectivity?
With orbital collision risk soaring, is a catastrophic Kessler Syndrome event now unavoidable for planet Earth?