In first, Russian test strikes satellite using Earth-based missile - Washington Post
Image - US Department of Defense

In first, Russian test strikes satellite using Earth-based missile - Washington Post

Blog Editor's Note: There are lots of reasons folks who care about GPS and other GNSS should worry about this.

  1. It shows Russia is practising taking out satellites. Space Force and DIA have warned about hunter-killer satellites, space-based and terrestrial lasers, and other weapons. Also that Russia and China have the capability, or will soon, to destroy lots of satellites at one time. Since GPS is America's Achilles heel, it is a prime target.
  2. These "tests" generate a lot of debris. While most of it is in Low Earth Orbit (LEO), 19% of tracked debris is in Medium Earth Orbit (MEO) where GNSS dwell. BTW - don't be fooled by the numbers of tracked debris objects created. The number of untrackable objects created, some as small as a grain of sand, are moving fast enough to pass through and destroy a satellite or the space station.?
  3. More debris in LEO means an increased chance of a Kessler Syndrome event - a series of cascading collisions that eventually make LEO unlivable. It could also make it very dangerous or impossible to transit LEO denying us use of MEO as well. At the very least, it makes passing through that region of space more dangerous.

Some folks dismiss concerns about debris. Space is big, they say, and the probability of collisions are low.?The same thing is sometimes said about airspace and airplanes. 278 people have died in mid-air collisions since 2000.?How many mid-air or mid-space collisions are acceptable??How much pollution and danger are we willing to tolerate?

BTW - While this might be the first time Russia has shot down a satellite with a ground based missile, they have been destroying things in space since the 60's. We suspect this incident is because the U.S. and China have already done it with ground based missiles and Russia had to show they could do it as well.?

Join Domestic Preparedness Journal and the RNT Foundation tomorrow afternoon for a free Webinar - "Protecting GPS Satellites, Signals, and America." - Click here to register now.

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In first, Russian test strikes satellite using Earth-based missile

Russia conducted a strike against a Soviet-era satellite in space on Monday, creating more than 1,500 pieces of debris that U.S. officials said posed a reckless risk and showed Moscow’s insincerity when it says it doesn’t want to weaponize space.

The test marked the first time that Russia has demonstrated an ability to strike a satellite using a missile launched from Earth.

During a briefing, State Department spokesman Ned Price said the anti-satellite test had created more than 1,500 pieces of sizable debris that could damage other satellites or affect astronauts at the International Space Station.

“Earlier today, the Russian Federation recklessly conducted a destructive . . . test of a direct ascent anti-satellite missile against one of its own satellites,” Price said. “The test has so far generated over 1,500 pieces of trackable orbital debris and hundreds of thousands of pieces of smaller orbital debris that now threaten the interests of all nations.”

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Jaime P Oliveira

Owner of Maxsundance Space Corp. Created the concepts > #SpaceJunkCollector #circularspacestation =MS1 #highaltitudelaunchstation Advocating for a clean orbit for a safe future of space travel should be our priority.

3 年

#SpaceJunkCollector Probably the solution to the problem. Let's clean up before ???? E ???? destroys their own dead satellites to hide secrets and thus making ISS security and space travel near to impossible. Let's not forget that ???? did the same in 2019. @StateDept @PFPAOfficial

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Christian Kotscher

CEO & Founder - Geospatial Innovator

3 年

Hard to react. Where is the HATE button? Good thing people are working on alternatives.

Richard Hoptroff

Founder and CTO at Hoptroff - Smart Timing Worldwide

3 年

Debris is a serious and long lasting attack. A Kessler cascade would make low earth orbits unmanageable for decades.

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