Objects detected in
the vicinity of ClearSpace-1 debris removal mission
target
22/08/2023
On 10 August 2023, ESA’s Space
Debris Office was informed by the United States 18th
Space Defense Squadron that new objects have been
detected in the vicinity of a payload adapter.
This adapter, named VESPA, was
left in orbit following the 2013 launch of a Vega
rocket from ESA’s spaceport in Kourou, French
Guiana. The object is a 113 kg, two-metre-diameter,
conical upper portion of a payload adapter
associated with the VV02 Vega launch that delivered
the Proba-V, VNREDSat-1 and ESTCube-1 satellites
into Earth orbit.
The new debris is believed to
originate from the VESPA adapter, which is in an
orbit with perigee at 660 km altitude, apogee at 790
km and an inclination of 98.72 degrees.
This payload adapter is the
subject of the upcoming ClearSpace-1 active space
debris removal (ADR) mission. It is being developed
as the first-ever mission to remove an existing
derelict object from orbit through highly precise
and complex, close-proximity and capture operations.
ESA procured the Clearspace-1
mission as a service from the Swiss start-up
‘ClearSpace’ in order to demonstrate the
technologies needed for debris removal and as a
first step to establishing a new, sustainable and
striving commercial space ecosystem.
The information currently
available indicates that the most likely cause of
the event was the hypervelocity impact of a small,
untracked object that resulted in a low-energy
release of new fragments. A preliminary assessment
indicates that the increased collision risk to other
missions posed by these fragments is negligible.
The US 18th Space Defense
Squadron has conducted further tracking, and the
TIRA system of the Fraunhofer Institute for High
Frequency Physics and Radar Techniques in Germany
and the Polish “European Optical Network” members
(under ESA contract) have also conducted independent
observations. These observations indicate that the
main object remains intact and has experienced no
significant alteration to its orbit.
The development of the
ClearSpace-1 mission will continue as planned while
additional data on the event is collected. ESA and
industrial partners are carefully evaluating the
event’s impact on the mission. A full analysis will
last for several weeks.
This fragmentation event
underlines the relevance of the ClearSpace-1
mission. The most significant threat posed by larger
objects of space debris is that they fragment into
clouds of smaller objects that can each cause
significant damage to active satellites. To minimise
the number of fragmentation events, we must urgently
reduce the creation of new space debris and begin
actively mitigating the impact of existing objects.
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