3 thoughts on “DMSP Explosion”

  1. Space News has an article about the explosion of DMSP-F11 in 2004. Perhaps that was the case I heard about at Space Command HQ but that was years after 2004. In that case, the most likely cause was a problem in the propulsion system. The satellites batteries had already been disconnected and depleted long before the breakup.

    As far as deorbiting them, they’re in pretty high (~850 km) orbits. It’d take quite a bit of propellant to being their perigee low enough to deorbit or have a speedy delay. From what I recall, they don’t do a lot of maneuvering with DMSP satellites once they’re in their operational orbits. I have not found how much propellant a DMSP satellite carries at launch but IIRC, it isn’t very much because the mission doesn’t need to maneuver much.

  2. DMSP propulsion system is shut down permanently very early in the spacecraft’s life, on the order of days after launch. There’s a cloud of them out there that would be a great job for multiple space tugs.

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