SpaceX will lose up to 40 satellites it just launched due to a solar storm
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Up
to 40 of SpaceX's Starlink satellites are expected to fall out of orbit thanks
to some inopportune timing: The company launched the satellites directly into a
solar storm.
A
batch of 49 Starlink internet satellites were on SpaceX's latest launch on
February 3, and now the company is expecting to lose most of them because they
hit a space weather event known as a geomagnetic storm. This event occurs when
streams of charged particles, or solar winds, emitted from the sun interact
with Earth's magnetic field. The energized particles can heat up the upper
atmosphere, causing it to thicken. (Yes, there is still atmosphere in areas of
outer space closest to home. The Earth's atmosphere fades out over thousands of
miles.)
In
this case, the storm impacted the area of orbit where SpaceX's newest Starlink
satellites were deployed, and it made the atmosphere dense enough that the
satellites weren't able to maneuver their way up to their intended orbit.
It's not clear how large the financial impact will be.
SpaceX has not shared how much it costs to build a Starlink satellite, though
the company's president, Gwynne Shotwell, said in 2019 that the price was well below $1 million a piece.
The
satellites that SpaceX launched last week were expected to join roughly 2,000
Starlink satellites that it has already launched as the company
works to drastically ramp up its global space-based internet business — a first-of-its-kind venture that hopes to allow people in
even the most remote areas of the world to gain high-speed internet access.
SpaceX has said it will eventually need as many as 42,000 satellites, all
working in coordination to blanket the globe in connectivity, in order to
deliver high-speed, uninterrupted service. As of January, the service had about 145,000 users across 25 countries.
It's
not clear why SpaceX chose to move forward with the February 3 launch given
that space weather trackers already knew the storm was on the way. Rocket launches have
been delayed for space weather events before. Orbital Sciences, for example,
delayed a 2014 launch because of a massive solar flare.
"Different
companies have their own criteria" for deciding whether or not a space
weather event will impact their launch, said Bill Murtagh, the program
coordinator at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Space
Weather Prediction Center.
Still,
GPS data from the Starlink satellites "suggests the escalation speed and
severity of the storm caused atmospheric drag to increase up to 50% higher than
during previous launches," SpaceX wrote in an update on its
website. "The Starlink team commanded the satellites into a safe-mode
where they would fly edge-on (like a sheet of paper) to minimize drag—to
effectively 'take cover from the storm,'" according to the company.
But
early data suggests that the added drag from the storm prevented the satellites
from turning off the safe mode and "up to 40 of the satellites will
reenter or already have reentered the Earth's atmosphere," the SpaceX post
reads.
The
company noted that the failed satellites shouldn't pose any risk to other
satellites during their descent, and they should disintegrate as they slam into
the thickest part of Earth's atmosphere so that they don't threaten any people
or property on the ground.
All
of those safety measures are by design, the company said. SpaceX has said it
intentionally deploys its Starlink satellites at a lower altitude than their
intended orbit so that if a satellite malfunctions, it wouldn't be left to fly
uncontrolled through orbit for very long — a key space debris mitigation
effort.
But
deploying at a lower altitude may also be a key reason that these Starlink
satellites were so badly affected by the geomagnetic storm.
And
in a new filing with the Federal Communications Commission, which
must approve satellite launches, NASA raised concerns that the sheer number of
satellites that SpaceX has proposed could become a threat to the International
Space Station and other important assets in space.
Every
decade or so, the sun completes a solar cycle of calm and stormy activity and
begins a new one.
Eruptions
like solar flares and coronal mass ejection events — when the sun's outermost
atmosphere spits out plasma and magnetic fields — can impact the power grid, satellites, GPS, airlines, rockets and astronauts
in space. Space weather is known to cause disruptions in earthly
communications systems by affecting radio frequencies.
Our
current solar cycle, Solar Cycle 25, officially began in December 2019. Right now,
we're leaving a period of relative calm and the current cycle is expected to
reach its most active space weather phase in 2025.
On
a scale from one to five, the geomagnetic storm that affected the Starlink
satellites last week was a two, which is fairly mild, Murtagh said. The sun
puts off "several hundred" storms of that magnitude every 11-year
solar cycle, Murtagh said.
"The
beautiful visible manifestation [of space weather] is the northern lights that
everyone loves — that's the nice, pretty part. But the consequences, as we
found out on Friday, can be quite significant to some of these
technologies," Murtagh said.

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