City
Epaper

ESA satellite escapes collision with Russian space debris

By IANS | Updated: May 19, 2022 12:35 IST

Paris, May 19 The European Space Agency's (ESA) said its Earth-observing Sentinel-1A satellite barely escaped a "high-risk collision" ...

Open in App

Paris, May 19 The European Space Agency's (ESA) said its Earth-observing Sentinel-1A satellite barely escaped a "high-risk collision" from a 2021 Russian missile test that had generated over 1,500 pieces of trackable orbital debris in space.

ESA's Sentinel-1 mission is designed as a two-satellite constellation, which provides an all-weather, day-and-night supply of imagery of Earth's surface.

In a series of tweets on Wednesday, the ESA officials said Sentinel-1A, launched in April 2014, had to perform a set of emergency manoeuvres on Monday to avoid a "high-risk collision."

"On Monday, for the first time, we performed a set of manoeuvres to avoid a high-risk collision with #SpaceDebris created in the #Cosmos1408 anti-satellite test last year," ESA Operations said.

The agency noted that although its part of their routine work, yet this "was a difficult #CollisionAvoidance manoeuvre", "unique" as well as "tricky to avoid" because the situation evolved rapidly, and they had less than 24 hours of warning.

Even though the Russian satellite orbited more than 200 km below Sentinel-1A, the energy released during its explosion pushed fragments of it all the way up, intersecting the satellite's orbit.

As a result, the team said Sentinal-1A had to alter its orbit "by 140 m in order to prevent collision with a debris fragment".

Though the Sentinel-1A is safe for now, the ESA called out against the threat due to such space debris.

"Quick reaction by teams at #MissionControl, who managed to plan and execute an avoidance manoeuvre in a matter of hours, meant we safely avoided impact," they said.

"This incident highlights the devastating risks to the whole space environment from the (intentional) creation of space debris," they added.

In November 2021, Russia fired a direct-ascent anti-satellite (DA-ASAT) missile that collided with its defunct satellite, generating hundreds of thousands of pieces of space debris, or space junk. The DA-ASAT test also posed risk to the International Space Station, at that time prompting an outrage by the US.

According to the US Department of State, the anti-satellite test 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.

"...I'm outraged by this irresponsible and destabilising action. Their actions are reckless and dangerous, threatening as well the Chinese space station and the taikonauts on board," NASA Administrator Bill Nelson had said condemning the act.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Esa operationsparisRussiaEuropean Space AgencyParigi siEuropean space programBill nelsonRussian parliamentPakistan russiaRusNasa-european space agency
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalRussia Helicopter Crash: 5 Killed After Russian Defence Chopper Loses Tail; Video Goes Viral

Other Sports'Goodbye… But Not The End': Rohan Bopanna Announces Retirement After 22-Year-Old Career

InternationalRussia Train Accident: Goods Train Derails and Bursts Into Flames After Colliding With Truck in Smolensk (Watch Video)

InternationalRussia-Ukraine War: Poland Urges Citizens to Urgently Leave Belarus 'By Any Necessary Means'

InternationalAfter Nepal, Now France: Vehicles Torched, Train and Road Traffic Disrupted as 'Block Everything' Protest Turns Violent

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologySECI, Andhra Pradesh finalise 1,200 MWh battery storage system, 50 MW hybrid project

TechnologyPIA’s steep decline a story of Pak’s shrinking capacity to manage its public enterprises: Report

TechnologyDoctor calls for reestablishing human link, communications with critical care patients

TechnologyIndian media and entertainment sector projected to cross $100 billion by 2030

TechnologyMaruti Suzuki India recalls 39,506 Grand Vitara units over fuel indicator fault