Space Travel News  
DIY Anti-Satellite System

Accuracy and elegance are not issues in carrying out a satellite attack, the researchers say, as long as the projectile hits the satellite. In fact, all it would take to succeed with an amateurish, yet effective anti-satellite attack would be the control of an intermediate range missile, which is well within the reach of many nations and organizations with sufficient funds, and a college-level team dedicated to the cause.
by Staff Writers
Norfolk VA (SPX) Jun 24, 2007
Satellite tracking software freely available on the Internet and some textbook physics could be used by any organization that can get hold of an intermediate range rocket to mount an unsophisticated attack on military or civilian satellites. Such an attack would require modest engineering capability and only a limited budget. That is according to researchers writing in Inderscience Publishers' International Journal of Critical Infrastructures.

A terrorist organization or rogue state could threaten essential satellite systems, according to Adrian Gheorghe of Old Dominion University Norfolk, in Virginia, USA and Dan Vamanu of "Horia Hulubei" National Institute of Physics and Nuclear Engineering, in Bucharest, Romania. Military satellites, global positioning systems, weather satellites and even satellite TV systems could all become victims of such an attack.

Gheorghe and Vamanu have carried out an analysis of just how easy it could be to knock out strategic satellites, their findings suggest that dozens of systems on which military and civilian activities depend make near-space a vulnerable environment. The team used a so-called "mathematical game" and textbook physics equations for ballistics to help them build a computer model to demonstrate that anti-satellite weaponry is a real possibility.

Accuracy and elegance are not issues in carrying out a satellite attack, the researchers say, as long as the projectile hits the satellite. In fact, all it would take to succeed with an amateurish, yet effective anti-satellite attack would be the control of an intermediate range missile, which is well within the reach of many nations and organizations with sufficient funds, and a college-level team dedicated to the cause. "Any country in possession of intermediate range rockets may mount a grotesquely unsophisticated attack on another's satellites given the political short-sightedness that would be blind to a potentially devastating retaliation," the researchers say.

On January 11, 2007, China deliberately destroyed one of its own weather satellites in a test, which some analysts suggested as having the potential to revive a techno-political race believed to be defunct since the 1980s. According to Gheorghe and Vamanu that was the cool analytical view, but some hot diplomats are quoted as saying this demonstration is "inconsistent with international efforts to avert an arms race in outer space and undermining the security in outer space".

"While it may be true that, when it comes to nuts and bolts, things may not be quite as simple as they sound here, the bare fact remains - it can be done." Their conclusions suggest that the risk of deliberate satellite sabotage should be placed higher on the security agenda.

Related Links
International Journal of Critical Infrastructures
Old Dominion University Norfolk
"Horia Hulubei" National Institute of Physics and Nuclear Engineering
Military Space News at SpaceWar.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Funding Space Tracking and Surveillance Systems
Arlington (UPI) June 19, 2007
This is the week of the Paris Air Show, a glitzy excuse for aerospace executives and their government customers to network far from the prying eyes of politicians. Such contrived venues seldom produce any real news unless an airplane crashes. As one journalistic veteran of past shows puts it, "I've never worked so hard to get so little news." So don't expect any of this week's coverage from Le Bourget to make the cut at the next meeting of the Pulitzer Committee.







  • Air Force Continues Northrop Grumman Contract For Upper Stage Engine Program
  • World's Largest Vacuum Chamber To Test Orion
  • China To Increase Payload Capacity Of Carrier Rockets
  • SpaceDev, SpaceHab And Constellation Services Sign NASA Space Act Agreements

  • Arianespace Winning Launch Contracts From Across The World
  • 2006 Bumper Year For Satellite Launcher Arianespace
  • SES Signs For Five ILS Protons Through 2013
  • ILS Wins Arabsat-5A Contract To Launch On Proton Breeze M

  • NASA Basks In Shuttle Success Amid Tumultuous Year
  • Space Shuttle Lands Back On Earth
  • Bad Weather Pushes STS-117 Landing To Friday
  • Storm Front Could Delay Atlantis Return

  • Station And Shuttle Crews Close Hatches And Prep For Undocking Tuesday
  • STS-117 Shuttle Crew Conduct Fourth And Final Spacewalk About Space Station
  • Astronauts Fix Computers On ISS And Repair Shuttle Thermal Blanket
  • Computer Woes Strike International Space Station

  • Sunita Williams Makes Giant Leaps For Womankind
  • Lack Of Willingness To Discuss NASA Budget Deeply Disappointing
  • Moon Jobs May Crater Suggests Rutgers-Camden Researcher
  • Spaceport Closer To Breaking Ground

  • China To Launch Third Sino-Brazilian Satellite In September
  • China Launches Satellite To Take TV Signal Nationwide
  • China Launches Communications Satellite SinoSat-3
  • China Aims To Launch Moon Probe This Year

  • Japanese Humanoid Is Working In The Rain
  • Japanese Robot Receptionists For Hire
  • Japanese Researchers Help Robots Brush Up Communication Skills
  • Guessing Robots Predict Their Environments For Better Navigation

  • Mars Rover Laser Tool Ready For Testing
  • Mars Experiment To Push Mental Endurance To The Limit
  • Spirit Gets A Solar Panel Spring Clean
  • ESA Wants Space Pioneers For 520-Day Mars Experiment

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement