ISS Swerves to Avoid Collision With Earth-Imaging Satellite

NASA astronaut Nicole Mann looking through the window of the ISS.
NASA astronaut Nicole Mann looking through the window of the ISS.

Earlier this week, the International Space Station was forced to adjust its orbit to avoid an encroaching commercial satellite. The object is likely one of many Earth-observing satellites that are falling into and aligning with the space station’s orbital path, according to experts.

On Monday, the Progress 83 resupply ship that’s docked to the space station fired its engines for just over six minutes, slightly raising the orbit of the ISS in order to avoid an approaching satellite, NASA wrote in a blog post. The space agency did not identify the object, except to say that it was an “Earth observation satellite.”

Read more

However, there is speculation that the satellite in question may be Argentina’s Nusat-17, one of 10 commercial Earth observation satellites form the Aleph-1 constellation operated by Satellogic. Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, wrote on Twitter that the orbits of the Satellogic constellation has been gradually decaying and the satellites are now crossing the orbit of the ISS.

The latest ISS maneuver points to a larger issue of the growing number of satellites, both defunct and operational, and debris that pose a threat to orbiting spacecraft. More than 27,000 pieces of orbital debris are currently being tracked by the Department of Defense’s global Space Surveillance Network, with lots of smaller pieces also floating around undetected.

In December 2022, the ISS conducted a similar maneuver to avoid a collision with a Russian Fregat-SB upper stage fragment that threatened to come within less than a quarter mile of the space station. In fact, the space station has had to carry out 32 collision avoidance maneuvers since 1999. These orbital swerves have not impacted the astronauts on board the ISS so far. NASA stated that the most recent maneuver won’t impact the imminent Crew-5 departure from the space station.

The four astronauts of the Crew-6 mission arrived at the ISS on March 3, while Crew-5 astronauts are set to return home aboard the docked SpaceX Endurance spacecraft as soon as March 9. However, Cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitry Petelin, and NASA astronaut Frank Rubio, will stay aboard the ISS until September.

MORE: Russian Cosmonaut Forced to Abandon Spacewalk Due to Spacesuit Power Malfunction

More from Gizmodo

Sign up for Gizmodo's Newsletter. For the latest news, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Click here to read the full article.