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Tethers Unlimited reports successful operation of space-debris removal device by Staff Writers Bothell WA (SPX) Jan 29, 2020
Tethers Unlimited has successfully demonstrated on-orbit operation of the Terminator Tape, an affordable, lightweight solution for removing space debris from on orbit. In early September 2019, an automated timer unit on the Prox-1 satellite, launched in late June 2019 by the Air Force Research Laboratory's University Nanosatellite Program, activated deployment of TUI's Terminator Tape module. The Terminator Tape is a small module, weighing less than two pounds and about the size of a notebook, designed to attach to the exterior of a satellite. When the satellite has completedd its mission and is ready to be disposed of, an elecrical signal from either the satellite or an independent timer unit activates the Terminator Tape, causing it to deploy a 230-foot long conductive tape from the satellite. This tape interacts with the space environment to create a drag force on the satellite that lowers its orbit far more rapidly than it would if it were simply abandoned in orbit. "Three months after launch, as planned, our timer unit commanded the Terminator Tape to deploy, and we can see from observations by the U.S. Space Surveillance Network that the satellite immediately began de-orbiting over twenty-four times faster," said Dr. Rob Hoyt, TUI's CEO. "So, instead of remaining in orbit for hundreds of years. Rapidly removing dead satellites in this manner will help to combat the growing space debris problem. This successful test proves that this lightweight and low-cost technology is an effective means for satellite programs to meet orbital debris mitigation requirements." TUI is currently collaborating with Millennium Space Systems, TriSept, and RocketLab to prepare a scientific method-based low-Earth orbit flight experiment called "DRAGRACER", which will compare deorbit of two identical satellites, one with and one without a Terminator Tape, in order to enable robust characterization of the tape's performance.
Space telescope could collide with junked military satellite Moscow (Sputnik) Jan 29, 2020 Observers fear a collision of the two long-dead space objects could spew space junk across a broad area of near space, affecting satellites which are still in operation. The Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS), a massive 954 kg joint US, Dutch and British space telescope launched in 1983, is plotting a course to collide with GGSE-4 (2828), an experimental 85 kg US Naval Research Laboratory military satellite launched in 1967, space debris tracking service LeoLabs has reported. In a series ... read more
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