By Karen Parrish
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, May 12, 2014 – One congresswoman summed up the
issue succinctly during a House Science, Space and Technology Committee hearing
May 9: space junk is a growing problem.
Air Force Lt. Gen. John W. “Jay” Raymond, commander of 14th
Air Force, Air Force Space Command and U.S. Strategic Command’s Joint Force
Component Command for Space, testified at the hearing, along with technical and
legal experts and officials from the Federal Aviation Administration and
Federal Communications Commission.
Raymond noted his task force provides emergency warning of
impending orbital collisions to all of the world’s spacefaring governments and
companies, though it collaborates closely in space primarily with Australia,
Canada and the United Kingdom. JFCC Space, he explained, catalogues and tracks
the trajectories of all known orbiting systems and debris.
“JFCC Space is the world’s premier provider of space
situational awareness, data and products,” Raymond said. “Over the past few
years, we have bolstered our commercial and international partnerships, we’ve
implemented two-way sharing agreements, and we’ve worked collaboratively to
refine our sharing processes.”
The general noted the command also is on track to deliver a
new command-and-control system, the Joint Space Operations Mission System and
additional space situational-awareness sensors.
Each agency represented at the hearing, along with NASA and
others, has a role to play in U.S. space operations. All of the witnesses
stated that the United States must improve domestic space traffic management,
and move quickly to foster international agreement on use of space.
Key orbits -- mostly crowded with government-owned vehicles
-- are becoming obstacle courses, experts testified, as more countries launch
more objects into space. But each of those objects could become a minefield if
it collided with another at “hypervelocity” orbital speeds many times faster
than a bullet, as one witness testified.
Such a disaster has happened spectacularly at least twice in
the past decade.
In 2007, China destroyed one of its own old satellite
systems in orbit during an anti-satellite weapon test, in what hearing
attendees called the largest known creation of space debris in history.
China’s test blasted the nonworking mass into a “cloud” that
diffused widely -- in some depictions, it now resembles a seeding dandelion
head -- and is estimated by some at the hearing to include 150,000 objects
centimeter-sized or larger.
The second orbital catastrophe was in 2009, when Russian
satellite Kosmos-2251 and U.S. commercial satellite Iridium 33 collided,
destroying both. Each vehicle disintegrated along its orbital path, scattering
a roughly X-shaped debris field one witness said holds some 2,000 objects of at
least a centimeter.
Each piece of space junk, as well as each functioning
orbital object that eventually will become junk, has a projected duration in
orbit that varies from months to centuries, witnesses noted -- mostly depending
on the object’s size, shape and orbital elevation.
Raymond said monitoring increasingly complex traffic and
debris in the space domain is and will remain his command’s mission as part of
DOD, both to protect national security and because no other agency is equipped
to do so.
While JFCC Space constantly tracks orbital objects and
adjusts recorded trajectories, Raymond acknowledged the command has no
authority to act against a potentially destructive satellite or other object in
space.
Regulations governing even U.S. domestic spaceflight are
complicated. As witnesses explained, the FAA has authority over U.S. commercial
and government space vehicles -- but only on launch and re-entry, not during
orbit. The Defense Department has responsibility to monitor, but cannot
enforce, space movements.
But testimony suggested the need to bring order to managing
close encounters in space is pressing.
Raymond noted one witness had testified that NASA’s
International Space Station had changed position 16 times to avoid striking
other objects in orbit. “In fact, just last month we told them to move it
twice,” he added.
Witnesses and committee members agreed as the hearing closed
that effectively managing space transportation, clearing debris from orbit, and
protecting the planet from strikes by near-Earth objects are all challenges
that will require national and international effort.
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