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China's falling space station Tiangong-1 will be re-entering Earth’s atmosphere later today or early Monday. Officials insist that the bus-sized station will mostly burn up in the atmosphere and is unlikely to cause any damage on the ground. Others say that 10 to 40 percent of its mass could survive.
Chinese space officials lost contact with the 9.4-ton (8.5-metric ton) station in 2016 after five successful years of operations, including two visits by Chinese crews of astronauts. China did not make it clear if they cut off contact with the station deliberately, or if they lost telemetry with Tiangong-1 due to a technical issue.
Chinese space officials lost contact with the 9.4-ton (8.5-metric ton) station in 2016 after five successful years of operations, including two visits by Chinese crews of astronauts. China did not make it clear if they cut off contact with the station deliberately, or if they lost telemetry with Tiangong-1 due to a technical issue.