During the 1990s, it became clear that spacecraft and upper stages breakups contributed to the GEO debris environment while, recently, optical observations confirmed the presence of a large population of decimeter-sized particles, probably generated by a number of undetected explosions. Hoping to provide the optical observers with useful information and clues in identifying and characterizing the past explosion events near the geosynchronous region, a set of fragmentations in GEO of a typical communications spacecraft was simulated by assuming a reasonable range of the fragments' ejection velocities. Each debris cloud was propagated for 72 years, saving the results at intermediate time steps. The results - mainly represented as snapshots, at given post-explosion times, in the orbital elements' space - show the long-term evolution of each cloud of decimeter-sized debris as a function of the ejection velocity.
Long-Term Evolution of Debris Clouds in Geosynchronous Orbit
Pardini C;Anselmo L
2003
Abstract
During the 1990s, it became clear that spacecraft and upper stages breakups contributed to the GEO debris environment while, recently, optical observations confirmed the presence of a large population of decimeter-sized particles, probably generated by a number of undetected explosions. Hoping to provide the optical observers with useful information and clues in identifying and characterizing the past explosion events near the geosynchronous region, a set of fragmentations in GEO of a typical communications spacecraft was simulated by assuming a reasonable range of the fragments' ejection velocities. Each debris cloud was propagated for 72 years, saving the results at intermediate time steps. The results - mainly represented as snapshots, at given post-explosion times, in the orbital elements' space - show the long-term evolution of each cloud of decimeter-sized debris as a function of the ejection velocity.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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