Another Starlink satellite has inexplicably exploded

15 points
1/21/1970
16 hours ago
by ColinWright

Comments


pogue

I'm very curious what's causing these to just spontaneously explode. Bad engineering? Or Russian "satellite killers" anti-satellite weapons, perhaps? [1]

It’s hunting season in orbit as Russia’s killer satellites mystify skywatchers https://arstechnica.com/space/2025/07/its-hunting-season-in-...

12 hours ago

schiffern

Or just stochastic impacts with debris too small to track. Objects >1 cm are fatal to satellites, but ground radar can only track objects 10 cm or larger.

The two scenarios are pretty easy to distinguish. If the explosion occurred near the poles (above 75° latitude), it's most likely a random debris strike.

Sure enough, despite the fact that only 2.1% of Starlink satellites[0] are in orbits that go above 75° N/S, Starlink-34343 was one of those satellites.[1]

[0] https://planet4589.org/space/con/star/stats.html

[1] https://www.amsat-uk.n2yo.net/satellite/?s=64157

11 hours ago

PopGreene

Astronomers? I know they don't like starlink satellites. Might somebody have access to a powerful enough laser?

11 hours ago

pogue

You're suggesting astronomers possibility destroyed a satellite?

11 hours ago

Ancalagon

But data centers in space will totally work

12 hours ago

schiffern

A rate of one collision per year per 10,000 satellites, in low orbits where debris is quickly removed by drag, is perfectly manageable.

11 hours ago