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NASA Space

NASA Objects To New Mega-Constellation, Citing Risk of 'Catastrophic Collision' (arstechnica.com) 39

NASA has formally commented on a request by a US company to build a mega-constellation of satellites at an altitude of 720km above the Earth's surface, citing concerns about collisions. From a report: This appears to be the first time that NASA has publicly commented on such an application for market access, which is pending before the Federal Communications Commission. "NASA submits this letter during the public comment period for the purpose of providing a better understanding of NASA's concerns with respect to its assets on-orbit, to further mitigate the risks of collisions for the mutual benefit of all involved," wrote Samantha Fonder, an engineer for the space agency. At issue are plans put forth by AST & Science, which intends to build a constellation of more than 240 large satellites, essentially deploying "cell towers" in space to provide 4G and possibly 5G broadband connection directly to cell phones on Earth. The company, based in Midland, Texas, calls its constellation "SpaceMobile" and has raised an estimated $120 million.
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NASA Objects To New Mega-Constellation, Citing Risk of 'Catastrophic Collision'

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  • Finally! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Mr.Fork ( 633378 ) <edward.j.reddyNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Wednesday November 04, 2020 @12:58PM (#60683944) Journal
    Where were they when Mu$k was touting his Starlink internet that is ruining night skies for astronomers? NASA needs to have a bigger voice - and talk more about the bigger elephant in the room where a series of accidents in space could make our ability to leave our own planet impossible. More here: https://satellitesafety.gsfc.n... [nasa.gov]
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • "What I would like is some simple numbers"

        If only astronomy was always so simple... But it ain't.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • I know so little of REAL mathematics, but I've been told that some problems are just not simple. I'm sure it has been compiled. Just not simply. Indeed, figuring out how these satellites will/could fail is by itself, not so simple I bet. Then considering the various failure modes and the effects, and soon you've got too many problems to easily describe or quantify. That is my complaint - we may not really understand the implications, the possibilities, of these constellations of satellites. And the astronom

      • Being the stupidest person in the room is the best situation... Because you're learning. -Martin Molin

        A truly retarded quote; by the same logic, the poorest person in the room is the richest.

        This "Martin Molin" is definitely well-versed on the subject of stupidity.

        • by Rhipf ( 525263 ) on Wednesday November 04, 2020 @04:39PM (#60684758)

          Your analogy falls flat though. The quote by Martin Molin doesn't say the stupidest person in the room is the smartest. It says that "being the stupidest person in the room is the best situation" since you have more knowledge to gain than someone that is the smartest. You would have been better to say that by the same logic the poorest person in the room is in the best situation since they have the most room to increase their wealth (percentage wise at least). It doesn't sound as nice but that would be more inline with the original quote.

  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Wednesday November 04, 2020 @01:04PM (#60683960)

    Ok, we have some startup company, probably rushing to be first in the market. Who didn't plan all the details of a proposal in which NASA may have some objection to, do to the fact that they have been studying this stuff for over a half century.

    Half of us will Yell "Government is stopping legitimate business!" The other half will Yell "Evil Business is putting people at risk!"
    Where the probably correct action, is to work with NASA and see what they may be able to do to help fix their concerns.

  • An orbital distance of 720 km sounds far too distant for cellular access. The average distance to a satellite would be over 1000 km. Cell phones are not the greatest with regards to transmission strength - the antennas literally have to fit in your hands so there is only so much that can be done. This differs from Starlink which would have fewer users and much better ground based transceivers that are not limited to being powered by a cell phone battery. This proposal sounds like it is technically not

    • by jeadly ( 602916 )
      Or Balloons: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
    • Satellite dish Internet users will be able to explain ping and return problems... sure it's got bandwidth, but the ping sucks. Most TV guests are now relayed by landline or Zoom. Remember the delays of the 80s.

      • 720km is 2.4&#8249ms. The signal has to go up and down and the range will generally be longer than the minimum but the altitude is going to add well under 10ms of delay on average (double for round-trip time). This is very different from geosynchronous birds which are 40 times farther away.

      • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

        It all depends on how far away you are putting your satellite(s). Currently most satellite Internet providers and TV satellite relays are using geosync orbits for their satellite(s). At those distances the ping time are quite large. Starlink is using a near earth orbit for their satellites that allows much lower ping times.

  • NASA (and the FCC) needs start thinking ahead a lot further ahead on these. Musk got in there first, ok. Polluting LEO with multiple constellations of future Debris doesn't seem like a wise choice. Maybe the next proposal needs to include viable deorbit and reclamation plans?

    • I think they all include de-orbit plans. We all know about plans. As Moltke the Ender famously said:

      No plan of operations extends with certainty beyond the first encounter with the enemy's main strength.

      Moltke was therefore a strong proponent of having plan B and plan C.

    • Sirius' LEO operations crashed into space junk, and all three satellites were destroyed. It was one of the main factors in having to merge with XM, and Sirius-only radios are being served by XM's Rock and Roll geostationary locations fleet on Siruis's frequencies for now, but eventually SiruiusXM will have 3x its original frequency allotment (XM's original bandwidth, space reserved for a third player that never showed up, and Sirius's original allotment) for a unified service that could both ramp up quality

  • "Putting anything else up there might interfere with our classified surveillance satellites."
  • Do they expect Zuckerburg to fart and divert the thing into the sun? That's a movie I might watch.
  • Orbit it too high (Score:5, Informative)

    by stikves ( 127823 ) on Wednesday November 04, 2020 @03:01PM (#60684396) Homepage

    It is natural to compare against Starlink. But the orbits are very different.

    According to: https://www.spaceacademy.net.a... [spaceacademy.net.au]

    At ~340km, Starlink satellites have a life between 1 month to a year without active maneuvers. i.e.: if the satellite "dies", it will fall back to Earth in a short time
    At ~720km, the proposed satellites will have a life between 100 to 1000 years. i.e: they will stay there for a very long time, unless someone actively collects the "space junk"

    • At ~340km, Starlink satellites have a life between 1 month to a year without active maneuvers. i.e.: if the satellite "dies", it will fall back to Earth in a short time
      At ~720km, the proposed satellites will have a life between 100 to 1000 years. i.e: they will stay there for a very long time, unless someone actively collects the "space junk"

      Starlink isn't at ~340km. Parts are at 500km and 1,200km.

  • by bhcompy ( 1877290 ) on Wednesday November 04, 2020 @03:51PM (#60684588)
    I'm more curious about how a company out of Midland TX, which is the oil boom armpit 5+ hours from anywhere(El Paso, San Antonio, and DFW are the closest major cities and are over 5hrs away), can attract the talent to design and build these satellites. It's not somewhere anyone really wants to live and much of the population revolves around transient roughnecks and oil industry support structure subject to the oil boom/bust cycle. I'm not aware of any Permian Basin Institute of Technology that spits out aerospace engineers. Lubbock has Texas Tech, but that's known for its petroleum engineering program.

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