There are a lot of rocks flying around through space. Lots of debris, too. Old satellites, spent rocket boosters, even for a short while a spatula that got loose during a space shuttle mission in 2006. All of it swirling around in orbit, creating a bit of a traffic jam.

For years, the Pentagon has been worried about the collisions that might be caused by an estimated 500,000 pieces of debris, taking out enormously valuable satellites and, in turn, creating even more debris.

On Tuesday, the Defense Department took another significant step toward monitoring all of the cosmic junk swirling around in space, by delivering a gigantic new telescope capable of seeing small objects from very far away.

Developed by the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency, the Space Surveillance Telescope was formally transferred to the Air Force during a ceremony at White Sands Missile Base in New Mexico Tuesday.

The telescope is designed to monitor objects as small as softballs โ€” some of the most important real estate in space.

The telescopeโ€™s ability to see โ€œsomething very far away over a very wide area is really what itโ€™s best at,โ€ said Lindsay Millar, DARPAโ€™s program manager.

DARPA says the advanced technology in the massive, 90-ton telescope would allow officials to go from โ€œseeing only a few large objects at a time through the equivalent of a drinking straw to a windshield view with 10,000 objects at a time.โ€ It will also be used by NASA to monitor asteroids and other near-Earth objects that could collide with the planet, officials said.

The telescope is โ€œa big improvement over the legacy ground-based optical telescopes that are used by the U.S. Air Force, because it can search large areas of sky and also track very faint (small) objects in and around GEO,โ€ said Brian Weeden, a Technical Advisor at the Secure World Foundation.

, wrote in an email. โ€œThatโ€™s a critical capability for the U.S. military, as they have a lot of very important satellites in GEO, and are increasingly worried about threats to those satellites.โ€

The telescope would join another new space debris tracking technology known as the Space Fence, which is now being built by Bethesda-based Lockheed Martin. The radar system is going to be located on Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands and would use radar to help the Air Force track 10 times amount of debris than it currently monitors.

With many valuable assets in space-satellites used for intelligence, communications and guiding weapons-the Pentagon has become increasingly concerned with what it calls โ€œspace situational awareness.โ€ Instead of being a benign environment, the Pentagon likes to say that space has become โ€œcontested, congested and competitive.โ€ In orbit, debris moves very fast, as much as 17,500 mph, so that even a fleck of paint could cause damage.

In 2007, the Chinese fired a missile that blew up a dead satellite and littered space with thousands of pieces of debris. And the Air Force has been working to make its satellites more resilient. It has plans to send swarms of small satellites into orbit that are more difficult to target.

โ€œEvery military operation that takes place in the world today is critically dependent on space in one way or another,โ€ Air Force Gen. John Hyten said in an interview earlier this year when he was the commander of the Air Force Space Command. โ€œWhether our own people in the United States are fully cognizant of the dependence on space or not, the rest of the world has been watching us very closely.โ€