Space

US satellite explodes and ESA assesses risk

US satellite explodes and ESA assesses risk
Artist's concept of the DMSP satellite (Image: US Air Force)
Artist's concept of the DMSP satellite (Image: US Air Force)
View 4 Images
Highly exaggerated view of debris orbiting the Earth (Image: ESA)
1/4
Highly exaggerated view of debris orbiting the Earth (Image: ESA)
2/4
Artist's concept of the DMSP satellite (Image: US Air Force)
3/4
Artist's concept of the DMSP satellite (Image: US Air Force)
Diagram of the DMSP satellite (Image: US Air Force)
4/4
Diagram of the DMSP satellite (Image: US Air Force)
View gallery - 4 images

A US Air Force weather satellite exploded in Earth orbit on February 3, scattering debris along its path. In a report by Space.com, Air Force and space officials indicated the breakup of Defense Meteorological Satellite Program Flight 13 (DMSP-F13) was due to a malfunction of its battery system rather than a collision with a foreign body. Meanwhile, The European Space Agency (ESA) has released an assessment of the hazard posed by the debris.

DMSP-F-13 is part of a program set up in the 1960s to provide real-time weather data relevant to US military operations. The program was declassified in 1972 and in 1998 control was transferred from the US Air Force to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to save costs. DMSP-F-13 was launched in 1995 into a sun-synchronous polar orbit at an altitude of about 500 mi (800 km). Due to its age, it had been relegated to the status of backup satellite as the DMSP constellation was updated.

According to Space.com, the loss of the satellite was due its batteries failing catastrophically because of old age. This is a major problem with older satellites. Newer ones are designed to prevent such an occurrence, but telemetry indicated that the temperature of the batteries on DMSP-F-13 spiked suddenly just before the explosion.

Diagram of the DMSP satellite (Image: US Air Force)
Diagram of the DMSP satellite (Image: US Air Force)

The blast caused the satellite to break into fragments, which at last count were estimated to number 46 pieces. ESA ran an assessment based on data shared by the US Joint Space Operations Center and determined that the remains of DMSP-F-13 pose no danger to its operations, and that the orbits of the fragments will eventually decay until they burn up in the Earth's atmosphere.

"The event is not considered major," says Holger Krag of ESA’s Space Debris Office. "Should the reported number of fragments stabilize at this level, we can consider it to be within the range of the past 250 on-orbit fragmentation events. For our missions – with CryoSat-2 being closest to the event altitude – we do not expect any meaningful risk due to the event."

The Air Force says that the loss of DMSP-F-13 will have no effect on its services. The US government has not indicated that the debris from last month's explosion poses any hazard to its space operations.

Source: ESA

View gallery - 4 images
2 comments
2 comments
Misti Pickles
Batteries . . . Yeah right. Welcome to the escalation of the space war. Lazer tag, anyone?
Tony Morrill
Lol! I agree with Misti. I guess I've seen too many conspiracy movies because to me the words "U.S. Air Force weather satellite explodes from battery malfunction" actually mean "U.S. spy satellite blown to bits by recently launched Chinese satellite hunter".
We already know that China has been looking at ways to knock out satellites: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_Chinese_anti-satellite_missile_test
We also know that China just launched something into space only 2 weeks ago: http://www.ksl.com/?sid=33593153
So, I can't help but find it an odd coincidence that less than 2 weeks after China launches something into space, a U.S. military satellite mysteriously has a catastrophic explosion due to a 'battery malfunction'. Hmmmm. ;)