Published October 15, 2025 | Version v3
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Our Gods Haven't Fallen, Yet — A Space Junkies' Riddle — Our Cathedral

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This paper probes the escalating orbital debris crisis in low Earth orbit (LEO) as of October 2025, casting it as a stewardship challenge woven into the Recursive Timeline (RT) framework. With 42,941 tracked objects (ESA, 2025; Jonathan’s Space Report, 2025; earlier ~40,230, Tier 3 variance), it details orbital decay physics (β ≈ 12–15 kg/m²), the 2022 Starlink storm (38 deorbits, Fang et al., 2022), and Kessler Syndrome risks (N² collision scaling, 50–100 year lockout). Governance gaps pit the FCC’s 5-year rule against voluntary global frameworks, urging intentional action. Thematic metaphors—Doppler-radar ghosts, metal prayers, and Luke 10:18’s theological echo (Tier 3)—frame space as an extension of Eden, looping ancient trust (Sumerian bullae) with modern ledgers. Projections of ~100,000 satellites by 2030 (Tier 3) demand solutions like design for demise and active debris removal. Version 1.1 (2025-10-15) enhances readability with Markdown formatting, APA citations, and tables, preserving the call to keep space a garden, not a graveyard. (1139 characters)

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Our Gods Haven't Fallen, Yet — A Space Junkies' Riddle — Our Cathedral v1.2.pdf

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Is original form of
Publication: 10.5281/zenodo.17363456 (DOI)

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2025-10-15
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