Metro logo
My AccountMy Account
Small logo
  • Home
    • Trending
    • Newsletters
    • Puzzles+
    • Video
  • News
    • UK
    • London
    • US
    • World
    • Crime
    • Tech
    • Science
    • Politics
    • News Updates newsletter
    • E-edition
  • Entertainment
    • Showbiz
    • TV
    • Film
    • Music
    • Gaming
  • Sport
    • Football
    • Premier League
    • Transfer News
    • Cricket
    • Boxing
    • Tennis
    • Snooker
    • Football Newsletter – In The Mixer
  • Lifestyle
    • Sex
    • Health
    • Property
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Horoscopes
    • Money
    • Shopping
    • Lifeline
    • The Slice newsletter
  • Soaps
    • EastEnders
    • Emmerdale
    • Coronation Street
    • Hollyoaks
    • Soaps Showbiz
    • Soaps Newsletter
  • Opinion
    • Columnists
    • Letters
    • Cartoons
  • Shopping
    • Beauty Products
    • Black Friday
    • Amazon Prime Day
    • Shopping Newsletter
  • Puzzles
    • Puzzles+
    • Quick Crossword
    • Cryptic Crossword
    • Word Wheel
    • Hangman
    • Easy Sudoku
    • Medium Sudoku
    • Hard Sudoku
  • Money
    • Metro Deals
    • Investing
    • Cost of Living
    • Deals
    • Hacks
    • Saving
  • Property
    • What I Rent
    • What I Own
    • Property Prices
    • Home renovations
    • Interiors
    • Renting
    • Better Living
    • The Key Newsletter
  • Travel
    • Travel Advice
    • Travel Reviews
    • Travel Inspiration
    • The Getaway
  • Horoscopes
    • Your Daily Horoscope
    • Astrology
    • Tarot
    • Chinese Zodiac
    • Daily Horoscope Newsletter
  • More
    • Games
    • Submit Stuff
    • Competitions
    • Advertise
    • Weather
    • Trending
    • Privacy Policy
  • Metro on Instagram
  • Metro on Facebook
  • Metro on X
  • Metro on TikTok

Huge chunk of Soviet rocket may have broken up over southern England

Jen Mills
Jen Mills
Published May 11, 2025 10:12am Updated May 11, 2025 4:33pm
Share this article via whatsappShare this article via xCopy the link to this article.Link is copiedShare this article via facebook Comment now Comments
The descent capsule of Kosmos 482 has been orbiting Earth for over 50 years, but all things come to an end (Picture: NASA)

An out-of-control spacecraft intended to reach Venus has instead crashed back down to Earth, and it might even have happened in England.

If you saw a fireball streaking down overnight, it might be a good time to inform the European Space Agency.

They, along with Nasa, Roscosmos and other organisations, have been tracking the course of Kosmos 482, which launched in 1972 and has been whirling around in our orbit ever since due a malfunction which meant it never reached its intended location.

The part of the craft we are worried about is the descent capsule, which was created to withstand intense heat in order to reach Venus, and also means it could be more likely to withstand reentry to Earth.

Nobody recorded it crashing down, so exactly what happened to it is still a mystery.

It did not appear on radar screens tracking it above Germany, so we know that it did finally come back down.

The yellow line shows the spacecraft’s trajectory as it came down, with areas marked in red were potential land sites the spacecraft could have crashed to (Picture: EU SST)

Roscosmos, Russia’s space agency, said the spacecraft ‘ceased to exist, leaving orbit and falling into the Indian Ocean.’

They said they had been monitoring its descent via their automated warning system for hazardous situations in near-Earth space, and according to their calculations it reentered at 9.24am Moscow time, in the Indian Ocean west of Jakarta in Indonesia, around 560km west of Middle Andaman Island.

Nasa also said they believed the craft had come down in the Indian Ocean.

‘Because the probe was designed to withstand entry into the Venus atmosphere, it is possible it survived reentry, but has landed in the ocean,’ they said.

However, these predictions are not exact.

Based on #EUSST analysis & info and no-shows during passes, EU SST confirms that object Cosmos-482 Descent Craft decayed within the last estimated re-entry window (2025-05-10 06:04 UTC ±20 min.). Thank you for following our updates.https://t.co/qrL7e9VMJk #EUSpace #Cosmos482 pic.twitter.com/H2InGadQi0

— EU SST (@EU_SST) May 10, 2025

The window of where it could have come down is wide, with a few minutes give or take on the orbit route meaning a very different landing site, due to the spacecraft travelling at such high speed.

The EU Space Surveillance and Tracking system showed a map of its potential landing route, including land areas marked in red which were under its trajectory – including southern England.

More Trending

  1. AI bots are plotting 'total human extinction' on their own social media platform

    Channel: Tech Tech 5 hours ago By Josh Milton
  2. NASA delays humanity's long-awaited return to the moon - again
  3. Scientists think they know why there was a sea turtle stampede 80,000,000 years ago
  4. Elon Musk is chatting with his AI bot Grok about his name being in the Epstein files

They said that based on analysis, as well as its ‘no shows during passes’, they believe that satellite ‘decayed within the last estimated re-entry window’.

The fact that nobody saw it coming down may indicate that it did indeed come down over the ocean, as it would have been much more likely to be observed above land.

The European Space Agency said: ‘We have not received so far any reports on visual direct observations of the final re-entry, or on any impacts on ground.’

The exact fate of the satellite may become clearer in the next few days.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

Arrow MORE: Donald Trump urges Putin and Zelensky to meet ‘now’ for peace talks

Arrow MORE: Sheffield United can clinch place in Championship play-off final but big questions remain about their Premier League prospects

Arrow MORE: Mum defends ordering boob cake for son’s birthday to stop him breastfeeding

Comment now Comments Add Metro as a Preferred Source on Google Add as preferred source

Puzzles Newsletter

Get your favourite puzzles when they are ready to play on the website sent directly to you every day and track your daily streak!

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy

HomedividerNewsdividerTech
Related topics
  • Metro newspaper
  • Nasa
  • Russia
  • Space

AI bots are plotting 'total human extinction' on their own social media platform

Channel: Tech Tech 5 hours ago By Josh Milton
A robot reads a copy of the Metro newspaper.

AI bots are having existential crises after reading Metro's Moltbook coverage

Channel: Tech Tech 15 minutes ago By Josh Milton

Must Read

BERLIN, GERMANY - JANUARY 05: The remote control of an Amazon fire TV stick is pictured on January 05, 2022 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Thomas Trutschel/Photothek via Getty Images)

Amazon Fire TV device to stop working within weeks as support officially ends

Channel: Tech Tech 3 days ago By Josh Milton
LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 25: In this photo illustration, the age-verification screen is displayed on the website Pornhub on July 25, 2025 in London, England. From today, the UK communications regulator Ofcom is compelling websites with pornographic material to introduce new age-verification measures for UK users. Aylo, the parent company of the website Pornhub, had criticised such age-verification measures, saying they would simply force users to darker corners of the web that do not require any age confirmation. (Photo by Jack Taylor/Getty Images)

Pornhub announces deadline before they cut off access to UK users

Channel: Tech Tech January 27, 2026 By Luke Alsford

AI bots are plotting 'total human extinction' on their own social media platform

Channel: Tech Tech 5 hours ago By Josh Milton
NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, with the Orion capsule atop, is seen on Launch Complex 39B on Jan. 30, 2026, as preparation continues for the Artemis II crewed flight to the moon. (Photo by: Jennifer Briggs/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock)

NASA delays humanity's long-awaited return to the moon - again

Channel: Tech Tech 12 minutes ago By Josh Milton
CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, South African-Canadian-US businessman Elon Musk speaks during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on January 22, 2026. The World Economic Forum takes place in Davos from January 19 to January 23, 2026. (Photo by Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP via Getty Images)

Elon Musk is chatting with his AI bot Grok about his name being in the Epstein files

Channel: Tech Tech 23 hours ago By Josh Milton
Donald Trump's futuristic vision of Gaza 'is AI-generated', experts say The Board of Peace

Donald Trump's futuristic vision of Gaza 'is AI-generated', experts say

Channel: Tech Tech 6 days ago By Josh Milton
Play Video A combination image with Tesla's Optimus humanoid robot and CEO Elon Musk.

Tesla drops two car models to create humanoid robots instead

Channel: Tech Tech 5 days ago By Noora Mykkanen
A GP office with a poster for 'EMMA' and a receptionist made from binary code.

Meet the 'AI receptionist' picking up the phone for 1,000,000 GP patients

Channel: Tech Tech 5 days ago By Josh Milton
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Mojahid Mottakin/imageBROKER/Shutterstock (15690931aw) Dhaka, Bangladesh- 02 June 2025: Close-up of a computer screen displaying the Gmail web interface in dark mode Various 25bbaf

Criminal database exposes 48,000,000 Gmail account passwords

Channel: Tech Tech January 25, 2026 By Brooke Davies
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Piero Nigro/Alto Press via ZUMA Press/Shutterstock (13637916p) Notebook with Windwos 11 Desktop background on November 24, 2022. The latest Windows operating system has been available since October 2021 and is being rolled out gradually as an update for compatible devices. Laptop with Windows 11 Desktop, Duesseldorf, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Deutschland - 24 Nov 2022

Microsoft issues rare emergency update for millions of users over Outlook bug

Channel: Tech Tech January 27, 2026 By Josh Milton

Trending Now

Read more storiesRead more stories
  1. Plane crash Hollingworth Picture Jason Roberts / Manchester Evening News

    Light aircraft crashes in Greater Manchester sparking major emergency response

    Channel: UK UK 2 hours ago By Luke Alsford
  2. Boy 'sang Thomas the Tank Engine theme' to get through four hour swim to save his family
  3. Prince Edward first royal to speak out after bombshell Epstein files release
  4. Man turns up at hospital with a WWI bomb stuck up his backside
  5. Boy, 13, arrested after pregnant woman seriously hurt in e-bike hit-and-run

Metro Shorts

metro deals

more offersmore offers
<strong>Bannatyne Spa</strong>
Bannatyne SpaSpa day for two with treatments, lunch & prosecco — save up to 57% off.
<strong>Mystery Escape</strong>
Mystery EscapeHotel stay with return flights from as low as £92pp — save on worldwide holiday packages.
<strong>Beach Retreat (Lanzarote)</strong>
Beach Retreat (Lanzarote)4* Lanzarote beach holiday with flights — save up to 58%.
<strong>UK Getaway</strong>
UK Getaway4* Radisson Blu Durham stay with breakfast, spa access & late checkout — save 60% off.
<strong>Drive Supercars</strong>
Drive Supercars 3–12 lap supercar driving experiences from £16.99 — save up to 65%. 
Metro logo
  • © 2026 Associated Newspapers Limited
  • Powered by WordPress.com VIP
  • Your ad choices
  • IPSO Regulated
  • Contributors
  • Newzit
  • Daily Mail
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Do not sell or share my personal information
  • Site map
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Metro on Instagram
  • Metro on Facebook
  • Metro on X
  • Metro on TikTok