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Space The Military

A Russian Military Satellite Appears to Be Stalking a New US Spy Satellite (thedrive.com) 61

When a U.S. satellite passed over Russia's Plesetsk Cosmodrome, a Russian satellite was launched close behind it "with capabilities unknown," reports the Drive, adding that it's now "getting suspiciously close..." Russia has launched satellite 14F150 Nivelir into orbit under a mission dubbed Kosmos-2558, and its current orbital path could soon place it in close proximity to what is reported to be the spy satellite designated USA-326. Unconfirmed rumors that the asset will serve as an 'inspector' satellite to covertly spy on nearby spacecraft have begun to circulate online following the launch and would line up with Russia's known on-orbit anti-satellite weapons capabilities and developments.

Its exact purpose is unknown at present, but it has been described as an "inspector" satellite, a term that is often associated with so-called "killer satellites...." Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Center for Astrophysics, or @planet4589 on Twitter, has noted that Kosmos-2558's current orbital path will soon place it within 80 km of what is believed to be the USA 326 satellite. For reference, the Center for Astrophysics is a collaborative effort run jointly by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and Harvard College Observatory....

USA-326 was launched in February of this year by a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket out of Vandenberg Space Force Base, its mission designated NROL-87, which is a classified national security operation led by the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) in partnership with SpaceX. A press release shared by the NRO following the initial launch claimed that NROL-87 was designed, built, and now operated by the NRO to support its "overhead reconnaissance mission," which is largely centered around protecting national security through the exploitation of space-based intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance.

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the story.
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A Russian Military Satellite Appears to Be Stalking a New US Spy Satellite

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  • During World War I aircraft were originally used for reconnaissance, with opposing pilots waving to each other, so what's coming now should be clear

    • Time to start the death star.
    • Imagine then, Elon Musk, making some of his Starlink Satellite magically go kamikaze on these Russian Satellite :D The Real-time gonna start looking like command and conquer real soon lmao.
      • What you think will happen then? The Russians would launch a satellite which would destroy every Starlink satellite, and we end up with even more spacejunk making it harder to go to space.
        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          What you think will happen then? The Russians would launch a satellite which would destroy every Starlink satellite, and we end up with even more spacejunk making it harder to go to space.

          Sure, all ~2800 of them. Get real.

    • It would be best to avoid war with Russia.

      • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

        It would be great to avoid war with Russia. But, do you really believe that peace is achievable with Putin? Sorry (not sorry), but I'm not of the Neville Chamberlain ilk.

        • It would be great to avoid war with Russia. But, do you really believe that peace is achievable with Putin?

          With Putin? Yes, absolutely. With Nikolai Patrushev? Maybe not, we have to be a bit diplomatic.

    • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @03:16PM (#62767510)

      During World War I aircraft were originally used for reconnaissance, with opposing pilots waving to each other, so what's coming now should be clear

      Hands on satellites so they can wave to each other? Seems odd.

    • There are a large number of many different types of satellites vital for not only tracking various meteorological conditions of the planet but the whole systems of civilian and military communications are deeply embedded in orbiting units. Once those are surrendered to the dangers of destructive military force, much of current civilization will vanish, to no one's advantage. As insane as current military activity may be, the entire world has become vulnerable to massive disasters never encountered before. I
  • I hope not, but if we start waging war in orbit there will soon be a huge amount of debris. Then how long before it will be too dangerous for astronauts ?

    • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @01:32PM (#62767316)

      I think everyone agrees it would be a bad thing to start scattering junk all over, but fortunately, spy satellites (the most likely target) tend to be placed in very low earth orbit. Any debris in those orbital planes would fall back down to earth in a few years, a decade at most, due to the very slight drag created by the uppermost of atmospheric molecules.

      What would be disastrous is to start polluting the geosynchronous orbital track with debris. By comparison, that's a very limited space that every geosynchronous satellite has to share. And because it's so high, debris there is pretty much going to stay there permanently (at least by our lifetimes).

      • by mbkennel ( 97636 )

        It's foolish of course for Russia to get into a satellite war as thanks primarily to SpaceX and secondarily Arianespace, NATO has a major lift volume advantage.

        But Russia being foolish in their machismo is unfortunately a likely outcome.

      • What would be disastrous is to start polluting the geosynchronous orbital track with debris. By comparison, that's a very limited space that every geosynchronous satellite has to share.

        If you were to compare the two you would see that the surface area of GEO is 25x that of LEO. Geosynchronous orbits are not constrained to the plane of the equator.

        And because it's so high, debris there is pretty much going to stay there permanently (at least by our lifetimes).

        All depends on particulars of the orbit. Shit could start falling out as soon as a few decades.

        • by nazg00l ( 699217 )

          Well, if by "geosynchronous" one means "where a satellite stays above a single point of Earth's surface", as is the standard meaning, then actually geosynchronous orbits ARE constrained to the plane of the equator, so there is effectively one.

        • Correction: I actually meant "geostationary orbit", which of course is limited to a single orbit.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by quonset ( 4839537 )

      I hope not, but if we start waging war in orbit there will soon be a huge amount of debris. Then how long before it will be too dangerous for astronauts ?

      Considering Russia has its troops occupying the largest nuclear plant in Europe and is storing munitions [nytimes.com] directly next to the reactors [themoscowtimes.com] as well as torturing the people operating the plant, I don't think they're much concerned about debris in space.

    • by gtall ( 79522 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @02:41PM (#62767440)

      Putin was asked about their satellite. His response: is not satellite, is potato.

      • Nikita Khrushchev once said something similar about the American Vanguard satellite: Is not satellite, is grapefruit.

    • If space-faring nations start a shooting war, then sending people into space will be the least of our worries.
  • by fermion ( 181285 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @12:55PM (#62767256) Homepage Journal
    Thankfully the US has highly competent militaryâ(TM)s personnel to defend out space assets.
    • by dfm3 ( 830843 )

      Thankfully the US has highly competent militaryâ(TM)s personnel to defend out space assets.

      As competent as Slashdotâ(TM)s unicode support?

    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      Thankfully the US has highly competent militaryâ(TM)s personnel to defend out space assets.

      You've clearly not spent much time around the military.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Saturday August 06, 2022 @01:38PM (#62767326)

    The new satellite was launched into a close orbit. The article itself seems to mainly talk about what "could" happen and what its purpose "might" be.

    If it actually is a killer satellite - well, hopefully Russia's aim is better with satellites than has been the case with their "precision" missiles in Ukraine.

  • laser with your sensitive optics!"

  • Spy vs Spy is a fair game.

    We launched a "spy satellite" to observe what Russia is doing. Russia launches a "counter spy satellite" to observe what our "spy satellite" is doing.

    It is interesting to watch happening, but until there is actual damage done, it remains "no harm, no foul". Even if there is a collision, the rule of three applies: Once is an accident, Twice is a coincidence, Three times is enemy action.

    • dah dit dit dit / dah dit dah dah // dit dah dah dit / dit dah dit / dah dah dah / dit dit dit dit / dit dit / dit dah / dit dit dit
    • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

      "Even if there is a collision, the rule of three applies: Once is an accident, Twice is a coincidence, Three times is enemy action."

      Maybe for public consumption. But, there are no real accidents on this level of international recon. Only denial and deception.

  • ...by dropping off an explosive turd for the "Inspector" to either
    • a) pass by or
    • b) examine.
    • by sxpert ( 139117 )

      this would be utterly irresponsible

    • And you think the Russians would let the satellite 'live' after that? Nope, they would go satellite hunting on every US satellite.
    • ... which as others have pointed out, might make the problem worse. As well as being the moral equivalent of dropping anti-ship mines in international waters on the approaches to a major harbour.

      If you really wanted to do "something", and could get it past the diplomat corps, then a magnetic "mine" with some hunt-attach propulsion+logic, and a payload of a high-surface area drogue which could be deployed as a distinct option to "attaching" ; something that would considerably increase the drag on the target

  • Some of the US "spy" satellites are not like the others.

    This could be a new model or just an odd ball.

    The Russians could be interested in the tech or just what it is doing.

    The direction it points at or it's emissions could give it away.

    All spy organizations are snoopy & sneaky little weasels with an almost infinite amount of curiousity.

    All us civillians will probally NEVER know and if we find out, it will be decades from now.

  • Cue the Looney Toons comedy sequence where the US satellite erratically tries to evade the pursuing Russian satellite, zigzagging across the sky, changing speed in an attempt to prevent the other from getting close enough to take detailed pictures of the tech and/or link up to intercept/extract intelligence.

  • We'd better keep up the pace on protecting our interests in outer space or, once again we will be behind the Russians and Chinese in developing defensive weapons of the future.

The only possible interpretation of any research whatever in the `social sciences' is: some do, some don't. -- Ernest Rutherford

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