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Aerospace offers new solutions for Space Traffic Management by Staff Writers Colorado Springs CO (SPX) Apr 24, 2018
The Aerospace Corporation's Center for Space Policy and Strategy (CSPS) released two new policy papers that examine major implications for space traffic management due to the proliferation of small, hard-to-track satellites and plans for vast constellations of small- and medium-sized satellites. The first paper, GPS Transponders for Space Traffic Management, proposes a radically new way of thinking about space traffic management, based on the use of onboard GPS transponders. These devices could more timely and accurately report a spacecraft's position than the current decades-old systems that track satellites and other space objects with radar and optical telescopes as part of the DOD Space Surveillance Network. The system could provide additional advantages, as well-for example, by enhancing onboard navigation and facilitating proximity operations. "GPS transponders could provide positive identification for a spacecraft and allow operators to maintain a lock on it, even when it is thrusting or dead," said Dr. Andrew Abraham, author and senior member of Aerospace's technical staff. "By providing more-accurate position information, GPS transponders could significantly enhance the ability to compute the probability of collision. There is a margin of error in predicting a satellite's position at any moment; as a result, operators spend a considerable-and growing-amount of time responding to false alarms and planning unnecessary avoidance maneuvers." Abraham considers a number of basic factors and requirements on how such a system could work and what trade spaces need to be considered: message formats, operating modes, configuration, ancillary data, and ground architecture. Of course, the success of such a system will ultimately depend on the coordinating authority that could consist of government agencies, civil administrations, commercial entities, or volunteer networks-or any combination of these. "Implementing a space-tracking system based on GPS transponders would take time and major effort, but the benefits from fewer collision avoidance maneuvers and longer satellite lifespans appear to far outweigh the costs," said Dr. Jamie Morin, executive director for CSPS. "The number of space vehicles and debris objects is expected to increase substantially in the near future, so this is an opportune time to consider a new era of space traffic management." The second policy paper, New Space Activities: Implications for Space Traffic Management, considers various solutions to the space-traffic problem. These mostly confront the difficult task of minimizing growth in the number of future objects and maximizing the accuracy of orbital predictions. To chart a path forward, Marlon Sorge, senior project engineer for Aerospace's Space Innovation Directorate and one of the authors, suggests, "The space community needs to decide who will be responsible for space traffic management, and what those responsibilities will entail. Satellite operators will also need significantly better space situational awareness." The authors also suggest that this could be achieved a number of ways: motivating operators to self-report orbital data, attaching tracking aids to spacecraft components, and extending the Space Surveillance Network, as a few examples. "The DOD has been examining this issue for several years, but time is running out," said Sorge. "The neighborhood is changing up in space, and planners need to act soon to manage the increased traffic-before on-orbit collisions become commonplace and collision warning alerts become unmanageable." + Center for Space Policy and Strategy
Space Maid: Robot Harpoon and Net System to Attempt Space Cleanup Moscow (Sputnik) Apr 05, 2018 Humanity has grown accustomed to autonomous cleaning robots since the Roomba's debut in 2002. Now, we might have an upgrade: scientists have sent a prototype satellite equipped with a net and harpoon to the International Space Station to be tested. If successful, RemoveDEBRIS will lead to technology that will clean up Earth's space junk for us. It's been 61 years since the first launch of a satellite, Sputnik 1, into Earth's orbit. That's a long time to go without cleaning up after yourself and sc ... read more
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