Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Abstract:
In this paper, we investigate the collision risk during the whole operational life of the large constellations
OneWeb, Starlink and Telesat. We propose to determine the risk during a normal scenario of the operational
life of the large constellation or with a stressful event like a breakup. We produce a background environment
of space debris simulated for the next years and compute the collision rate of the satellites with space debris.
We focus on each phase: (i) the deployment phase of the constellation where the satellites with their own
electric propulsion system perform the orbit raising, (ii) the operational phase where the satellite are kept
in station, (iii) the decommissioning phase where the satellites are extracted from the constellation, and the
perigee is lowered to perform an atmospheric reentry within a given residual lifetime ranging from 0 to 25
years. For each satellite of the large constellations previously mentioned, we give the evolution of the collision
rate for each phase, and the number of collision avoidance manoeuvres expected. In reason of the high number
of satellites inside the large constellation, the risk of accident increases. We will also investigate the impact
of a breakup in the large constellations. On the short term, after a breakup, the fragments spread along the
orbit and form a torus due to the differential mean motion. The collision risk is changing quickly during this
phase. On the long term, the cloud spreads to form a shell due to the non-sphericity of the Earth and the
differential variation of the right ascension of the ascending node. Then, the collision risk will be stabilized.
This analysis give us strong constraints for the design of large constellations.
Tipologia CRIS:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
collision risk; large constellations; LEO
Elenco autori:
Petit, Alexis; Rossi, Alessandro; Alessi, ELISA MARIA
Link alla scheda completa: