Astroscale Japan Awarded Grant
of up to U.S. $80 Million by Government of Japan to
Inspect a Large Defunct Satellite in Orbit
Oct. 2, 2023
Astroscale Japan Inc. has
been selected by the Japan Ministry of Education,
Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (“MEXT”) for its
Small and Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program to
develop an on-orbit inspection demonstration mission
that will image and diagnose a large, defunct satellite
in space. The MEXT-funded project is divided into three
phases, and Astroscale Japan will receive up to JPY 2.69
billion (approximately U.S. $18 million) for Phase 1,
and up to JPY 12 billion (approximately U.S. $80
million) in total for all three phases. Mission
development will begin this month with a maximum term of
up to March 2028.
The SBIR program was established to
promote research and development for Japanese startups
and organizations engaged in advancing innovative
technologies, and to facilitate the smooth
implementation of results through government support.
The call for application was announced in July 2023, and
Astroscale Japan was selected in the space category for
its “Development and Demonstration of Technologies and
Systems for Removing Satellites and Other Objects from
Orbit” project under the "Development and Demonstration
of Technologies Required for Space Debris Reduction"
theme.
The MEXT-funded mission will
further advance Astroscale’s heritage Rendezvous and
Proximity Operations (RPO) capabilities, in addition to
inspection and characterization capabilities for a
diverse range of active spacecraft and large debris
objects in space. Astrosale Japan will launch a similar
mission later this year that will inspect and
characterize a spent upper stage rocket body. Active
Debris Removal by Astroscale-Japan (ADRAS-J) is the
world’s first attempt to safely approach, characterize
and survey the state of an existing piece of large
debris through RPO. During this mission, ADRAS-J is
designed to rendezvous with a Japanese upper stage,
demonstrate proximity operations, and gather images to
assess the rocket body’s condition, including spin rate,
spin axis and condition of the structure.
A key challenge of missions is that
unprepared objects, such as spent upper stages and
defunct satellites, do not provide any GPS data, meaning
the precise location and orbital position needed for an
RPO mission is not available. Once deployed to a precise
orbit, Astroscale’s servicer spacecraft will first use
ground-based observation data of the client’s
approximate orbital position to approach the client from
longer distance, then switch over to its own sensors for
a safe close approach and inspection of the client.
These missions will demonstrate the most challenging RPO
capabilities necessary for on-orbit services, including
debris removal.
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