Satellites Are Falling Out Of Their Orbits At Alarmingly High Rate And Sun Is To Blame

It is a well-known fact that satellites in near orbit above Earth are susceptible to the residual atmosphere’s drag, which progressively slows the spacecraft and finally causes them to fall down to Earth and burn up in the atmosphere. 

According to a study by Space.com, satellites have been falling out of orbit at an alarmingly growing rate in recent years due to a bizarre phenomena that may be traced to the sun’s mood swings.

Satellites now fall and crash 10 times quicker than in the past.

This sequence of occurrences has coincided with the beginning of the new solar cycle and has caused satellites to fall and crash up to ten times quicker than previously, a huge increase by all accounts.

Anja Stromme, ESA’s Swarm mission manager, told Space.com that during the last five or six years, the satellites have sunk around 2.5 kilometers (1.6 miles) every year. “But since December last year, they have been virtually diving. The sink rate between December and April has been 20 kilometres [12 miles] per year.”

Since last autumn, our beautiful life-giving sun has been acting up, producing increasing amounts of  solar wind, sunspots, solar flares, and coronal mᴀss ejections, all of which have had a substantial influence on the upper atmosphere of Earth. All of this is due to the conclusion of the star’s 11-year solar cycle.

However natural this process may seem, it causes havoc for our satellites.

“There is a lot of complex physics that we still don’t fully understand going on in the upper layers of the atmosphere where it interacts with the solar wind,” Stromme said. “We know that this interaction causes an upwelling of the atmosphere. That means that the denser air shifts upwards to higher alтιтudes.”

Denser air always leads to higher drag on satellites, which may cause some lower-orbiting spacecraft to crash and perish.

“It’s almost like running with the wind against you,” Stromme said. “It’s harder, it’s a drag — so it slows the satellites down, and when they slow down, they sink.”

The expert said that all spacecraft about 250 miles in alтιтude are likely to be affected. This implies that even the International Space Station will need to do more regular reboots to remain afloat, but what about the common satellites that are unable to perform such procedures?

“Many of these [new satellites] don’t have propulsion systems,” Stromme said. “They don’t have ways to get up. That basically means that they will have a shorter lifetime in orbit. They will reenter sooner than they would during the solar minimum.”

Space debris will likely be removed as a result of this circumstance, which is a positive outcome. Humans have been firing objects into space for sixty years, creating a problem of space trash that has to be cleaned up immediately.

Now, this solar phenomenon may draw the majority of debris from space!

Reference(s): Space.com

Related Posts

Astronomers discover a highly habitable alien planet with a probability of 84% – Highest EVER

The Kepler mission discovered a planet orbiting the star KOI-3010 using the transit method. Researchers are drawn to this world because it has traits that are similar…

Quantum Experiment Breaks Reality By Seeing Two Versions Of Reality Existing At The Same Time

We are aware of how skewed our perception of reality is. How we see the world is shaped by our senses, our societies, and our knowledge. And…

Astronomers just discovered first direct evidence of black hole spinning

In a groundbreaking discovery, astronomers have obtained the first direct evidence confirming that black holes do indeed spin. This monumental finding focuses on the supermᴀssive black hole…

BREAKING🚨: AI Built To Find Aliens Just Picked Up EIGHT Aliens Radio Signals From Outer Space

Up until recently, astronomers have had difficulty separating probable alien signals from those created by humans. Thanks to a new artificial intelligence-trained system, eight unexplained radio signals…

Scientists Watched a Star Explode in Real Time for The First Time Ever

Astronomers have watched a giant star blow up in a fiery supernova for the first time ever — and the spectacle was even more explosive than the…

NASA’s $10 billion Telescope has just captured its first direct unbelievable image of a Planet outside our Solar system

The James Webb Space Telescope has captured the first direct image of a distant exoplanet, a world beyond our Solar System. Webb has returned several pictures of…