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Keeping Space Free Of Debris

Now at the end of its service lifetime, SPOT 1 is being de-orbited by engineering teams at CNES' Toulouse Space Centre starting since 17 November, lowering the satellite into an orbit below 600 kilometres.
Paris - Nov 27, 2003
On 22 February 1986, a European Ariane 1 launcher orbited SPOT 1, the first European Earth observation satellite decided by the governments of Belgium, Sweden and France. Initially designed to operate for three years, SPOT 1 has since supplied commercial operator Spot Image with more than 2.7 million high-quality satellite images.

Now at the end of its service lifetime, SPOT 1 is being de-orbited by engineering teams at CNES' Toulouse Space Centre starting since 17 November, lowering the satellite into an orbit below 600 kilometres.

Although still capable of acquiring high-quality imagery after 18 years in service, SPOT 1 has reached the end of its operating lifetime. Consequently, CNES has decided to use the satellite's last reserves of fuel to place it in a lower orbit.

If the satellite was left alone at its current altitude, it would continue to orbit the planet for another 200 years before re-entering the atmosphere, gradually breaking up over the years and leaving a trail of debris in its wake.

Guidelines laid down in October 2002 by the Inter Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee (IADC) are designed to avert such situations by requiring all satellites in low-Earth orbit to be de-orbited within no more than 25 years.

Although the guidelines do not in fact apply to SPOT 1, which was built well before they came into effect, CNES has decided to set an example by voluntarily de-orbiting the satellite.

In this lower orbit, SPOT 1 will be subjected to higher drag that will cause it gradually to lose altitude and break up naturally in the atmosphere after about 15 years, thus posing no danger to populations on Earth.

The other three SPOT satellites-SPOT 2, SPOT 4 and SPOT 5-will continue to deliver imagery, which is marketed by Spot Image. SPOT 5's enhanced performance has confirmed the remarkable imaging capability of the SPOT Earth observation system in service since 1986.

The recent contract awarded to EADS Astrium to build two Pleiades satellites carrying high-resolution instruments supplied by Alcatel Space assures continuity of service for the next decade.

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Space Is Big, But Not Big Enough
Paris (ESA) Sep 30, 2002
According to Douglas Adams, in his famous book The Hitch-Hikers Guide to the Galaxy, space is big. However, it seems near-Earth space is not big enough.



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