The dangers of orbital debris were starkly highlighted recently when the return of a Chinese space crew from the Tiangong Space Station was delayed. The three taikonauts of the Shenzhou-20 mission—Chen Dong, Chen Zhongrui, and Wang Jie—were originally scheduled to return on November 5th.
China’s Manned Space Agency (CMSA) confirmed that preliminary assessments revealed the Shenzhou-20 re-entry capsule had been struck by space debris. Subsequent inspections revealed “tiny cracks” in the capsule’s viewport window, rendering it unsafe for atmospheric re-entry and forcing an emergency postponement.

The emergency plan and online commentary
While the crew remained safe and healthy aboard the station, which had been operating with six astronauts following the recent arrival of the Shenzhou-21 replacement crew, engineers worked urgently on a solution. The alternative plan—a contingency often discussed in spaceflight circles—was swiftly executed: the outgoing Shenzhou-20 crew would return home aboard the newly arrived Shenzhou-21 spacecraft.
This high-profile incident sparked widespread discussion online, with many experts and commentators using it as a “massive wake-up call” concerning the escalating problem of space junk in Low Earth Orbit (LEO).
- The Threat of MMOD: Reports emphasized the extraordinary speed of orbital debris (sometimes tens of thousands of miles per hour), noting that even millimeter-sized fragments can impact with the force of a bullet, a risk collectively known as Micrometeoroids and Orbital Debris (MMOD).
- China’s Role Highlighted: Some international affairs and space experts pointed to the irony of the situation, noting China’s own significant contribution to the problem, particularly referencing the 2007 anti-satellite weapon test which created thousands of debris fragments still orbiting today.
- Successful Rescue: Despite the nearly two-week delay, the three taikonauts successfully undocked and returned safely to the Dongfeng Landing Site in China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region on November 14th, marking their 204-day mission as the longest for any crew on the Tiangong station.
The safe return of the crew, including four mice used for scientific experiments, successfully concluded their extended rotation, but the incident serves as a powerful reminder of the vulnerability of spacecraft to the vast and dangerous cloud of space debris.
