At least 28 pieces of debris from India’s A-SAT missile test still floating in space
Science

At least 28 pieces of debris from India’s A-SAT missile test still floating in space

NASA tracked at least 101 pieces of debris initially, 28 of them still remain in low Earth orbit, says astrophysicist Jonathan McDowell.

   
ASAT Missile

File photo of the A-SAT missile launch | PIB India

New Delhi: NASA has found that at least 28 pieces of debris from India’s ambitious anti-satellite (A-SAT) missile test are still in the low Earth orbit — over seven months after India successfully test-fired the missile, thereby joining an elite group to possess such capability.

After the missile test, NASA had said it created around 400 pieces of debris that could threaten the International Space Station (ISS) as well as future space missions.

India’s Ministry of External Affairs had, however, then said “whatever debris was generated will decay and fall back onto the earth within weeks”. Even DRDO chief G. Satheesh Reddy had said all the fragments would decay within 45 days of the test.

But Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Tuesday told ThePrint that NASA has tracked at least 101 pieces of debris from the A-SAT test initially, of which 28 still remain in low Earth orbit.

“We don’t know the size of the debris but most pieces are probably less than a metre in size, maybe 10 cm,” McDowell told ThePrint.

McDowell explained that some of these fragments travel at high speed of over 28,000 km/hour and thus pose a risk to satellites. 

“In particular, the orbits (debris) can intersect with that of the International Space Station. The risk of collision is low, but not completely negligible,” he said, adding that computer models show some of the debris could last in the orbit until 2022.

Concern over space debris

Debris in the low Earth orbit slowly starts decreasing their altitude due to friction in the atmosphere. Once these fragments re-enter the Earth’s atmosphere, they burn up.

According to NASA, over 5,00,000 pieces of debris or “space junk” are tracked as they orbit the Earth. They travel at such high speed that even a small piece of orbital debris can damage a satellite or a spacecraft.

Increasing space debris has been a cause of concern across the globe as it threatens astronauts aboard the ISS. The threat of a collision in space has also increased significantly with space-faring countries launching more and more satellites.


Also read: Pentagon defends India’s A-SAT test, says country is preparing for threats in space