The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

In space, no one can hear you clean (a machine does it for you)

- By Sarah Knapton

Science editor

BRITAIN is planning to deploy robot binmen to grab space garbage and drag it out of orbit so that it can burn up in Earth’s atmosphere.

This week, Oxfordshir­e-based Astroscale successful­ly tested out a robotic arm, which will be attached to its litter-picking spacecraft.

The arm, built by Airbus, is designed to grasp the metal rings, which keep satellites attached to rockets during take-off. It is a useful target because all satellites must have one.

Removing dead satellites is crucial to prevent space becoming overcrowde­d.

Nick Shave, the managing director of Astroscale, said: “We’ve got 10,000 tonnes of debris that’s been there since the start of the space age and there is a lot of legacy debris in some very useful orbits.

“You’ve got very big satellites and rocket bodies, and little bits that are left there, that we need to start clearing up because more and more constellat­ions that are providing services to us are having to do collision-avoidance manoeuvres.

“People are also getting worried about going into space, and there’s now even a phrase called ‘getting through the Starlink shell’ because there is essentiall­y a massive shell of satellites that you have to navigate, so we’re really starting to see a big traffic problem in space.”

There are more than 10,000 satellites orbiting the Earth – a four-fold increase since 2019 – and numbers are set to grow rapidly.

Some 400,000 satellites have been approved globally for low Earth orbit, with SpaceX alone poised to launch another 44,000 for its Starlink internet constellat­ion. Experts predict that once all the planned internet constellat­ions are operationa­l there will be around 16,000 decaying satellites at any one time that will need to come out of orbit.

Not only are the dead satellites clogging up valuable orbit space but they risk setting off a major disaster.

Astroscale has partnered with the UK Space Agency, the European Space Agency and Airbus on the Cosmic mission (Cleaning Outer Space Mission Through Innovative Capture), which will remove two defunct British satellites currently orbiting Earth.

The mission has just finished its design review and is expected to move into the implementa­tion phase before launching in 2026.

If all goes to plan, the company plans a fleet of litter-picking, fuelling and satellite servicing spacecraft­s, which could even launch from British soil once the country’s spaceports are operationa­l.

Catching a tumbling satellite in orbit has proved challengin­g and the team has employed gaming technology and artificial intelligen­ce to achieve the precision required.

Elie Allouis, the head of advanced concepts and robotics at Airbus, who led testing at the Satellite Applicatio­ns Catapult near Didcot last week said: “It’s like a complex space ballet.

“You can do a lot of things if you can catch a satellite in space: repairs, refuelling as well as de-orbiting at the end of its life.”

 ?? ?? The Astroscale robotic arm has been put through a series of tests
The Astroscale robotic arm has been put through a series of tests

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