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Indian Space Agency decommissions communication satellite
by Staff Writers
New Delhi(Sputnik) Feb 09, 2022

The ISRO said that decommissioning was completed, in accordance with UN space debris mitigation guidelines.

Space debris has become a real concern for space exploration agencies worldwide. According to estimates, there are 7,200 artificial satellites in total orbiting Earth and 27,000 pieces of man-made debris caught in orbit.

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has successfully decommissioned a 14-year-old communication satellite, INSAT-4B, which provided services in the Ku and C frequency bands.

Before starting the process, the bandwidth payload services such as DTH were seamlessly migrated to other geostationary satellites.

The ISRO said that decommissioning was completed, in accordance with UN space debris mitigation guidelines.

According to guidelines, any geostationary satellites should be raised to a nearly circular orbit well above the Geo belt to prevent its orbit from returning into the GEO-protected region within 100 years of re-orbiting. In the case related to the 3,025 kg INSAT-4B, the minimum orbit to which it was required to be raised was 273km.

"The finally achieved orbit is about 340km above Geo altitude in perfect compliance with Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee (IADC) guidelines for space debris mitigation of Geo objects," the ISRO said on Tuesday, adding INSAT-4B was the 21st Indian Geo satellite to undergo post-mission disposal.

The decommissioning was achieved after 11 re-orbiting manoeuvres executed between 17 and 23 January 2022.

The agency used the required propellant for such re-orbiting so that the satellite could be removed safely from orbit and avoid endangering any orbiting satellites.


Related Links
Indian Space Research Organisation
Space Technology News - Applications and Research


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TECH SPACE
Turion Space and NanoAvionics to build a satellite for orbital reconnaissance mission
Columbia IL (SPX) Feb 03, 2022
US company Turion Space, aiming to build spacecraft to remove orbital-debris, satellite servicing, and domain awareness, has selected NanoAvionics small satellite bus, the MP42, as the basis for its 'Droid-1' spacecraft designed for a reconnaissance mission in low Earth orbit (LEO). The launch of the Droid-1 satellite is planned for the first quarter of 2023. Using its onboard sensors, Turion Space's satellite will be able to take extremely accurate measurements of spacecraft and objects in orbit. ... read more

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