The failed Russian Mars probe, Phobos-Grunt, continued its descent to Earth on Saturday, losing hundreds of metres in height every hour.
By 23:00 Saturday (GMT), the 13-tonne spacecraft was circling the planet at a mean altitude of 147km.
It is likely to impact the thicker parts of the atmosphere and burn up sometime late on Sunday, according to orbital tracking experts.
The Russian space agency says little of the probe will survive to the surface.
It calculates no more than 200kg in maybe 20-30 fragments.
Precisely where on the Earth's surface - and when - this material could impact is impossible to say, however. There are huge uncertainties in forecasting the final moments of a re-entry.
"The major uncertainty for prediction is the atmospheric density the spacecraft encounters in orbit, but it's also due to the orientation of the vehicle as it comes in," explained Prof Richard Crowther, the UK Space Agency's chief engineer.
"It can very quickly tumble and if pieces break off - that all changes the trajectory and where debris might impact."
This is the third high-profile spacecraft re-entry in four months, following the return in September of the American UARS satellite and the German Rosat telescope in October. Both fell over the ocean.
With so much of the Earth's surface covered by water, there is every chance Phobos-Grunt will do the same. (More information on the spacecraft's orbit can be found here)
Continue reading the main story- Phobos-Grunt sits on the cruise stage that was supposed to take it to Mars. Attached also is Yinghuo-1, China's first satellite built to go to the Red Planet
- Most of this 2.5 tonnes of hardware will burn up in the atmosphere. The more-than-10-tonnes of fuel is expected to explode when the tanks rupture
- Phobos-Grunt's orbit around the Earth means that it can only enter the atmosphere between the latitudes of 51.4 degrees North and South
- Roughly one old satellite or rocket body will fall to Earth every week, but at 13 tonnes Phobos-Grunt is one of the biggest, uncontrolled falls in recent years
The mission was supposed to be the most exciting Russian space science venture in decades - an audacious bid to scoop up rocky fragments from the Martian moon Phobos and bring them back for study in Earth laboratories.
The spacecraft launched successfully on 8 November, entering a "parking orbit" some 345km above the Earth. But Phobos-Grunt then failed to push on to the Red Planet as planned.
Continue reading the main storyPhobos-Grunt - Mishap sequence
- 8 Nov (GMT): The probe launched successfully on its Zenit rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome
- It was dropped off 11 minutes later in an elliptical orbit some 345km above the Earth
- Two firings from the probe's hydrazine-fuelled cruise stage were planned over South America
- The first, lasting 11.5 minutes, should have raised the orbit of Phobos-Grunt to 4,000km
- A second burn, four hours into the mission, was to have sent the probe on a path to Mars
- But Russian engineers later confirmed that neither burn took place
- Controllers have had only limited radio contact with the probe; mission recovery was not possible
- Re-entry is now imminent; 20-30 fragments are expected to survive the descent to Earth
For some reason, its big boost engine did not fire. Attempts to contact the spacecraft and diagnose the fault have proved fruitless.
Both professional and amateur tracking groups have since been trying to work out when it will fall out of the sky. Their most recent estimates continue to cluster around late Sunday (GMT). But, again, these forecasts have large uncertainties.
The spacecraft's rate of descent is being monitored by radar and the tracking groups will be using this information to try to narrow the uncertainties as the weekend progresses.
A lot of attention has focussed on the amount of fuel that Phobos-Grunt is carrying.
Out of the total launch mass of more than 13 tonnes, in excess of 10 tonnes was the fuel needed to complete the mission.
Phobos-Grunt's tanks were filled with the propellants Unsymmetrical DiMethylHydrazine (UDMH) and Dinitrogen TetrOxide (DTO), both of which are toxic.
But, crucially, the tanks are made of aluminium, which has a relatively low melting temperature.
Analysts are confident the tanks will rupture and their contents will be destroyed or dispersed long before any debris can reach the surface.
"Depending on when something breaks up and what it's made of and how it comes away from the main vehicle, it can either burn up or survive re-entry," said Prof Crowther.
"In the case of Phobos-Grunt, it's a flying fuel tank in many respects, and so most of the mass is fuel which should explode."
The Russians have had a torrid run of space failures recently, leading the head of the country's space agency to wonder even if saboteurs were at work.
Western countries, which use Russian rockets to launch their satellites, are just worried though that some systematic failures have started to appear in what has traditionally been a highly regarded space industry.
With their own opportunity to go to Mars now lost, the Russians may decide to put their future interplanetary efforts into joint ventures with the Americans and the Europeans. The Russians have an offer from the US and Europe to join the ExoMars missions to the Red Planet in 2016 and 2018.
Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter
Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-16491457
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