Debris from a Chinese rocket fell back to Earth on Sunday, disintegrating over the Indian Ocean, according to Chinese state media.
The reports cited the China Manned Space Engineering Office as saying that the point of impact was southwest of India and Sri Lanka.
“After monitoring and analysis, at 10:24 (0224 GMT) on May 9, 2021, the last-stage wreckage of the Long March 5B Yao-2 launch vehicle has reentered the atmosphere,” it said in a statement.
The fragments are from the Long March-5b rocket that was used to launch the first module of China’s new space station last month.
At 18 tons it is one of the largest items in decades to have undergone an uncontrolled reentry into the atmosphere.
There had been fervent speculation about where it would land, but given that Earth is nearly 70% water the chances of it hitting an inhabited area were very small.
Last year, debris from a rocket fell on villages in Ivory Coast but there were no injuries or deaths.
Fragments from NASA’s ill-fated Skylab plummeted back to earth in 1979 and landed in western Australia, but no one was harmed.
What had the US said?
US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said on Thursday that the US military had no plans to shoot down any remains of the Chinese rocket.
“We’re hopeful that it will land in a place where it won’t harm anyone. Hopefully in the ocean, or someplace like that,” Austin told reporters.
Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at Harvard University’s Center for Astrophysics, told the AFP news agency: “Having a ton of metal shards flying into the Earth at hundreds of kilometers per hour is not good practice, and China should redesign the Long-March 5B missions to avoid this.”
China slams Western “hype”
But the Chinese government has attacked criticism of its space program as Western “hype.”
Global Times, a pro-Beijing outlet, quoted a Chinese aerospace expert, Song Zhongping, as saying “it is an old trick used by hostile powers every time they see technological breakthroughs in China, as they are nervous.”
The Long March 5B rocket lifted off from China’s Hainan island on 29 April.
It was carrying the Tianhe module, which contains what will become living quarters for three crew members on a permanent Chinese space station.
The Tianhe launch was the first of 11 such missions needed to complete the station.