Welcome to the ESA Space Weather Service NetworkPlease note that all ESA-SWE Services are under review/construction
Welcome to the ESA Space Weather Service Network
Please note that all ESA-SWE Services are under review/construction
Space Surveillance and Tracking Services
Space Surveillance and Tracking Services
Information
The Space Age has generated a huge number of man-made hazards to complement
the naturally occurring ones. Space Weather can and does directly affect
these objects, thus compounding the risks they pose and making them less
predictable and harder to follow. Orbiting hardware can take a long
time to decay and if present launch rates persist then certain orbital regimes
will soon start to become highly congested and further increase the risk of collision.
Space Surveillance and Tracking Background
Geospace is populated by millions of man-made objects in Earth orbit of which more than 13,000 with a size >10 cm are regularly tracked. The majority comprises of launcher bodies and other mission-related objects and fragments, with only about 10% tracked active satellites. Earth-orbiting objects constitute a possible threat, in space (collisions, adverse actions on space systems) and on ground (uncontrolled and high-risk re-entry).
Tracking involves detection of objects in space and determination of orbit state and covariance (uncertainty). An important operational issue concerns forecasting of the trajectories of decaying objects that eventually enter the lower and denser atmospheric layers. The object trajectory change depends on the thermosphere density at its precise location, i.e. on altitude, latitude, and longitude, all of which appear rapidly changing during the re-entry process. Consequently, the requirement to take risk reduction measures to avoid re-entry over populated areas requires accurate 3-D modelling of the thermosphere and 3-D forecasting of the object trajectory in the geographic sector concerned.
Modelling thermospheric density for the purpose of drag calculation is an important part of the SST domain and this requires reliable space weather real-time and archive data. Space Weather nowcast and forecast of key parameters include the solar EUV radiation deposition and the level of Joule heating by ionospheric currents.