Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

India in space super league

New Delhi says anti-satellite weapon test created minimal space debris, but questions remain

- By Doris Elin Salazar

Just weeks before election season starts in India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the nation completed a successful test- fire of its first anti- satellite launch missile, dubbed "Mission Shakti," on Wednesday (March 27). The event sparked a global conversati­on about space policy, politics and the militariza­tion of space in the hours that followed, as well as speculatio­n about whether that type of test could create dangerous space debris.

This achievemen­t by India's D e f e n c e Re s e a r ch and Developmen­t Organisati­on ( DDRO) and the Indian Space Research Organisati­on ( ISRO) makes it only the fourth country to ever launch an anti- satellite (ASAT) weapon.

"The test was done in the lower atmosphere to ensure that there is no space debris," officials from India's Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement. "Whatever debris that is generated will decay and fall back onto the earth within weeks."

The contents of Modi's address to the nation were unexpected. There was intense speculatio­n about what his message might be about after Modi tweeted an advisory of the announceme­nt, which was scheduled for about noon local time.

An anti-satellite weapon is anything that destroys or physically damages a satellite. According to SpaceNews, the only other countries that have fired an ASAT are the United States, Russia and China.

Most outlets confirmed the satellite target was an Indian spacecraft in low Earth orbit called Microsat- R, according to astrophysi­cist Jonathan McDowell at the Harvard Smithsonia­n Center for Astrophysi­cs.

The satellite target was at an altitude of about 168 miles ( 270 kilometers), McDowell told Space. com, and was passing northbound over the Bay of Bengal when the ASAT intercepte­d it.

The launch missile "doesn't carry any explosive, but just puts itself in the path of the satellite," McDowell said. "The satellite is traveling at 18,000 mph ( 29,000 km/ h) … the kinetic energy of that impact is much more than any high explosive you could carry, so no point in putting a bomb on it."

The impact "would have sent a hypersonic shock wave through the Microsat- R satellite and reduced it to shrapnel," McDowell said. And after a few weeks it ought to burn up in Earth's atmosphere.

"What we are expecting is that U.S. space tracking will catalogue a bunch of new debris objects; that has not happened yet… before you can actually catalogue the debris, it may take several days to actually sort out and see how many individual objects you have, and not double count things," he said.

Unlike China's ASAT launch in 2007, which struck their Fengyun- 1C weather satellite resulting in severe fragmentat­ion and long-lived debris, McDowell

believes the orbital zone of Microsat- R means most of the shrapnel here will likely burn up in Earth's atmosphere over the next three weeks. But some may stay up for about a year.

Microsat-R was at a lower altitude than Fengyun. It was at about the same altitude as the sat

ellite USA 193, which was the target of a U. S. anti- satellite test called Operation Burnt Frost in February 2008, according to Space News. USA 193 was about 155 miles (250 km) high at the time of impact. Unlike Mission Shakti, the U.S. government announced Burnt Frost in advance.

ISRO is the space agency of the government of India, and has its headquarte­rs in the city of Bengaluru. DRDO carries out military research and developmen­t for the Indian government, and is based in New Delhi. Courtesy space.com

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 ??  ?? A man watches Prime Minister Modi's address during which he announed that an anti-satellite missile test had put the country in the space “super league”. AFP
A man watches Prime Minister Modi's address during which he announed that an anti-satellite missile test had put the country in the space “super league”. AFP

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