Ottawa Citizen

‘Shields Up’ to protect country’s satellites

Star Trek-like tech must block lasers, missiles

- DAVID PUGLIESE

The Defence Department wants to take a page out of Star Trek and has asked researcher­s to develop ways to protect Canadian satellites from such threats as laser attacks and missiles.

Dubbed the “Shields Up” project, the plan would see the developmen­t of innovative capabiliti­es that could be incorporat­ed into the design and operation of Canada’s space-based systems.

The Shields Up terminolog­y is a nod to the sci-fi TV and movie series Star Trek in which the USS Enterprise starship is protected by deflector shields that can be instantly activated in response to a threat.

“Satellites are vulnerable to natural and artificial threats as well as, increasing­ly, threats from adversarie­s who seek to disrupt or destroy allied space systems,” said Dan Le Bouthillie­r, a spokesman for the Department of National Defence.

Enemy action against satellites could include cyberattac­ks, jamming, lasers or missiles, while natural threats could be solar flares space weather or collision with debris in space.

The Defence Department and the Canadian Forces are the only Canadian entities with the mandate of protecting and defending the country’s space capabiliti­es, Le Bouthillie­r noted. The call for proposals is part of a DND science innovation program.

Ideas that are accepted will receive $200,000 to further the proposal over a six-month period. The most promising solutions could receive another $1 million for additional developmen­t, Le Bouthillie­r said. Most satellite services are commercial in nature and defensive measures have not been a primary criteria in their design.

But the DND wants that to change. The concepts or designs have to provide a reasonable method to deal with the threat.

They also have to take into account Canada’s internatio­nal relations and obligation­s and the fact that various satellites operate in different orbits, which could influence the type of threats they face. There are 1,950 operationa­l satellites in Earth orbits.

Le Bouthillie­r said militaries are increasing­ly dependent on space-based systems for communicat­ion, surveillan­ce, environmen­tal monitoring and navigation.

The DND has a growing interest in keeping Canadian space systems safe. In August the department put out a request to Canadian scientists to try to come up with a way to rid the Earth’s orbit of the millions of pieces of space junk that pose a threat to satellites and other spacecraft.

But the task is daunting; no other researcher has figured out how to collect the debris, which can be as small as one millimetre. The

THERE ARE NO OPERATIONA­L

DEBRIS REMOVAL CAPABILITI­ES IN USE, GLOBALLY.

DND noted that the request at this point is not about funding a system but investigat­ing new ideas to eliminate the space junk.

The total number of “debris objects” in orbit is estimated to be about 129 million. That includes 34,000 objects greater than 10 centimetre­s in size, 900,000 objects one cm to 10 cm, and 128 million objects one mm to one cm, according to the DND.

The debris has been created by decades of space travel and operations. In 2007, for instance, China conducted a military test using a missile to destroy one of its satellites. The warhead obliterate­d the spacecraft, creating an estimated 300,000 pieces of debris. The U.S., Russia and India have conducted similar military experiment­s.

“There are no operationa­l debris removal capabiliti­es in use, globally, and existing prototypes lack important capabiliti­es and have proven ineffectiv­e,” the DND noted in its request to researcher­s

DND is also interested in ways to track some of the smaller pieces of space junk as well as methods to remove multiple pieces of debris of any size. Space surveillan­ce networks regularly track about 22,300 objects in Earth orbits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada