Qatar Tribune

Tens Of Thousands Of Satellites Planned For Orbit

With major companies planning to launch as many as 50,000 satellites within a decade, the possibilit­y of satellites’ colliding in space presents a grim picture. It calls for stricter regulation

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SPACE, that final frontier, could become very crowded very soon.

There are an estimated 2,200 satellites orbiting the Earth at present, but telecommun­ications companies are launching dozens of new satellites regularly in hopes of providing high-speed broadband internet access to the entire planet.

Just how many satellites are we talking about London-based OneWeb planned to launch nearly 400 this year and ultimately have 6 0 in place. Elon Musk’s Space has put 240 into orbit since last spring and could have 1,000 more launched by the end of the year. The company hopes to deploy as many as 42,000 satellites for its Starlink internet system.

Not to be left out of the game, Amazon plans to create its own space-based internet system, Project Kuiper, with the launch of more than ,000 satellites.

That’s a lot of satellites that could fill the skies over the next decade. Now would be the time for the formation of an internatio­nal organisati­on composed of satellite companies, scientists and government representa­tives that would provide some control over how many satellites orbit the Earth.

While providing global internet access would open the doors to nearly billion people who are currently offline, the launch of these “megaconste­llations” of satellites has scientists and space officials worried about the impact of so many orbiting devices.

Some scientists fear that the sheer number of satellites could blot out the stars to the point where observatio­ns of the universe through Earth telescopes would be nearly impossible. They could also affect astronomy research by disrupting radio frequencie­s used for deep-space observatio­n. And there’s also the concern about the amount of space junk that could be floating around. There are already millions of pieces of junk from abandoned satellites or pieces of spacecraft in space. Crowding the skies with tens of thousands of new satellites increases the risk of more pieces falling off, as well as the possibilit­y the debris would strike other satellites. In the late ’70s, NASA scientist Donald Kessler put forth a theory the Kessler effect that the floating debris could create a catastroph­ic chain of collisions that would produce a field of space junk and hinder space travel.

Most astronomer­s doubt there is a real danger from the Kessler effect, but controllin­g the path of satellites and avoiding collisions will take considerab­ly more vigilance. Earlier this year, the possibilit­y of two satellites colliding over Pittsburgh drew wide attention. A NASA official said that if thousands more satellites are placed in orbit, collision avoidance manoeuvres would increase from “three a day to eight an hour.”

The good news is that before companies launch satellites, they have to present plans to their respective country’s regulators the Federal Communicat­ions Commission in the S. They have to provide an analysis of collision risks and proposals for taking satellites safely out of orbit. Most would burn up in the Earth’s atmosphere once taken out of orbit.

Still, the possibilit­y that 0,000 more satellites could be in orbit within a decade demands some internatio­nal attention and cooperatio­n. Taking steps now to limit the impact could keep the skies a bit clearer for future exploratio­n.

 ??  ?? (Tribune News Service)
(Tribune News Service)

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