Comment by JumpCrisscross
2 days ago
> until someone does some proper sort of 'true mapping' of space debris in the range somehow
You look at which satellites poofed and then figure out the maximum extent their debris could have drifted.
2 days ago
> until someone does some proper sort of 'true mapping' of space debris in the range somehow
You look at which satellites poofed and then figure out the maximum extent their debris could have drifted.
That works a little bit when we're talking about one satellite poofing in a year based on a collision with another satellite, and not at all when we're talking about thousands of events a year, many of which are satellite-debris collisions too small to track (you only get one orbital vector), or between pieces of debris.
Every collision generates hundreds, maybe thousands of pieces of debris, only the largest of which are trackable.
Not really. There are uncertainty bands. But based on the collision you know which orbits are spoiled for about how long.