
Courtesy of Analytical Graphics, Inc.
On Jan. 22, 2013, debris from a Chinese anti-satellite program test hit a Russian satellite.
By Leonard David, SpaceCom
A small Russian spacecraft in orbit appears to have been struck by Chinese space junk from a 2007 anti-satellite test, likely damaging the Russian craft, possibly severely, SPACE.com has learned.
The space collision appears to have occurred on Jan. 22, when a chunk of China's Fengyun 1C satellite, which was intentionally destroyed by that country in a 2007 anti-satellite demonstration, struck the Russian spacecraft, according to an analysis by the Center for Space Standards & Innovation (CSSI) in Colorado Springs, Colo.
CSSI technical program manager T.S. Kelso reported that the collision involved the Chinese space junk and Russia's small Ball Lens In The Space (BLITS) retroreflector satellite, a 17-pound spacecraft. The Fengyun 1C satellite debris was created during China's anti-satellite test on Jan. 11, 2007, and has posed a threat to satellites and crewed spacecraft ever since.
Evidence of the space junk collision was first reported on Feb. 4 by Russian scientists Vasiliy Yurasov and Andrey Nazarenko, both with the Institute for Precision Instrument Engineering (IPIE) in Moscow. They reported a "significant change" in the orbit of the BLITS satellite to the CSSI. [Watch the Animation: Russian Satellite Hit by Space Junk]
It is not immediately clear whether the satellite is merely wounded or completely incapacitated.
The space collision is the second substantial in-space accident between an active spacecraft and a defunct satellite or piece of space debris. In February 2009, a U.S. communications satellite was destroyed when it was hit by a defunct Russian military satellite, creating a vast debris cloud in orbit.
Tiny Russian satellite hit
The BLITS satellite is a nanosatellite consisting of two outer hemispheres made of a low-refraction-index glass, and an inner ball lens made of a high-refraction-index glass. It was launched in 2009 as a secondary payload on a Russian rocket and tracked by the International Laser Ranging Service for precision satellite laser-ranging experiments.
In addition to noticing the satellite's change in orbit, Yurasov and Nazarenko also detected changes in the spacecraft's spin velocity and attitude. [Worst Space Debris Events of All Time]
Satellite laser ranging uses short-pulse lasers and state-of-the-art optical receivers and timing electronics to measure the two-way time of flight (and hence distance) from ground stations to retroreflector arrays on Earth orbiting satellites.
On Feb. 28, the International Laser Ranging Service confirmed that the BLITS nanosatellite had collided with a piece of space debris. "As a result, an abrupt change occurred of the BLITS orbit parameters (a decrease of the orbiting period)," ILRS officials explained.
Besides this, as could be seen from SLR station photometrical observation results, the BLITS spin period had changed from 5.6 seconds before collision to 2.1 seconds after collision. The ILRS Central Bureau is based at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.
A change in orbits
The analysis by Russian scientists found that the orbital change on the BLITS satellite occurred on Jan. 22 at 2:57 a.m. EST (0757 GMT).
"They requested help in determining whether these changes might have been the result of a collision with another object in orbit," the CSSI's Kelso explained in a blog post on the Analytical Graphics, Inc. website, which analyzed the crash.
Starting from the hypothesis that an object capable of causing this change in the orbit of BLITS might be large enough to be tracked by the U.S. Space Surveillance Network, CSSI reviewed its own Satellite Orbital Conjunction Reports Assessing Threatening Encounters in Space, which is an archived database of potential space debris threats.
That review discovered only one close approach with another object, which, although it was supposed to be quite distant, occurred for the BLITS satellite on Jan. 22.
"Although the predicted distance would seem to preclude a collision, the fact that the close approach occurred within 10 seconds of the estimated change in orbit made it appear likely that this piece of Fengyun 1C debris actually collided with BLITS," Kelso wrote.
The CSSI is continuing to work with Yurasov and Nazarenko to further assess the circumstances of this likely collision.
More review needed
Kelso told SPACE.com that he is trying to address technical questions on this event, such as whether the individual masses of the pieces can be determined to assess how large a piece might have come off of the BLITS satellite.
Kelso said that the U.S. military’s Joint Space Operations Center released on March 3 the first two-line element set (TLE) — a data format used to convey sets of orbital elements that describe the orbits of Earth-orbiting satellites — for debris associated with BLITS. That information further confirms CSSI’s analysis, Kelso said.
The threat of space debris to satellites and crewed spacecraft orbiting Earth has been a growing problem. There are thought to be about 600,000 objects larger than 1 cm (0.39 inches) in diameter orbiting Earth, and at least 16,000 larger than 10 cm (3.9 inches), space debris trackers have said.
Leonard David has been reporting on the space industry for more than five decades. He is former director of research for the National Commission on Space and a past editor-in-chief of the National Space Society's Ad Astra and Space World magazines. He has written for SPACE.com since 1999. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on SPACE.com.
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Sounds like it worked above and beyond expectations, then! Still plaguing satellites five years later!
It may have been coincidental. The blast over Russia and the earths near miss on the same day for example.
They said that the collision was within ten seconds of the predicted piece of Chinese junk? Man, at the speeds these things are traveling, do you have any idea how many miles that is?
Anti satellite testing must be banned now. I said it then, and now again.
Here we go. The Russians will now take out a couple Chinese satellites, creating yet more dangerous debris. Soon there will be more dangerous debris than can be dealt with, and the US government will have to create a branch of NASA to try to clean it all up -- because no other nation will care about it, because they know the US will sink resources into that at the expense of its citizens and its defense.
I would say China simply owes Russia compensation for the loss of the satellite.
A lot cheaper than a satellite war.
Russia got what they had coming to them, their the ones that sold China it's space technology! F Russia!
Sending our astronauts to OUR space station on Russian space junk makes me PUKE!!!
That space station does NOT belong to ANYONE other than the Internatioal community that helped to build it.
It's not technically ours, but sometimes our astronauts like to put funny bumper stickers over the flag decals of other countries on the station's exterior.
Accident...really! Once upon a time I was told that accidents didn't happen, they were caused.
You were lied to. Get over it and move on.
Tim - I'm thinking that Sarge was offering his experience for areas and activities that require training and responsiblity for one's actions. In that case, there really are no "accidents", only failure to follow processes and procedure. From available open literature, chinese scientists are as upset as the rest of us about the stupidity of the chinese Generals that authorized this test without proper input from their scientific community.
Now the rest of us have to live with their actions.
I am surprised there haven't been more collisions of space junk, given the amount that is up there. It's the manned spacecraft like the ISS, that are at a grater risk.
There's a lot of space junk, but there's a LOT of space, too.
I mean, despite all the stuff we've launched up there, we're talking about an area greater than the surface of the entire planet, multiplied by the depth of low-Earth orbit. Most satellite launches don't worry about it; it took a disruptive launch, which destroyed a satellite, to cause a problem.
I imagine that's why we've never really worried about it until recently.
We need to air cannon in counter orbit direction to accelerate orbital decay of the space junk.
How could something as small as 0.29 inches of junk, not drop down and burn? Even a large mass of junk will not slow down and re-enter to burn up. How many years will it take for this space junk to re-enter and burn? Would
A blast of hot air slow down a piece of junk?
It's in a good orbit, so it will take a long, long time for it to eventually fall to Earth.
A blast of air or water, can't be found in space. So, what else is there to use in space that could be used to bring down the space junk? There is hydrogen, and the sun.
Que the lawyers. Sue China for millions.
Russians,Not a Fan...
I have yet to see one Smile,especially the Women.
so it works!! i think this is China's newest Great Wall idea - fill up the earth's low-orbit area with so much debris as to render ICBM's and spy satellites all but useless.
In a word...OOPS!