In a report on the Kessler syndrome, a scenario in which the amount of junk in orbit around Earth reaches a point where it just creates more and more, Popular Mechanics quoted John Crassidis, SUNY Distinguished Professor and Moog Professor of Innovation in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering.
A Salon article on NASA’s proposed space debris cleaning efforts, including a new report suggesting that lasers could be used to zap away small pieces of debris, quotes John Crassidis, Moog Professor of Innovation in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering.
John Crassidis, Moog Professor of Innovation in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, spoke to WGRZ-TV about how Starlink satellites orbiting Earth have been seen in the greater Buffalo area.
John Crassidis spoke to The Houston Chronicle about how, for the first time in 60 years of human spaceflight, a replacement spacecraft is being launched to bring crew members home after the Russian Soyuz capsule that carried them into space was damaged by a micrometeoroid roughly 1 millimeter in diameter.