Filed under Iridium News

News broke that one of Iridium 66 satellite communications satellites collided with an nonoperational Russian satellite.  It has created a large amount of debris in different orbit paths in space.  Iridium officials stated this would not hamper satellite phone service and over the next month they will be repositioning one of their backup satellites to take the place of the former sat.  Here is the release that was sent out.

Release:

February 10th, Iridium lost an operational satellite. According to information shared with the company by various U.S. government organizations that monitor satellites and other space objects (such as debris), it appears that the satellite loss is the result of a collision with a non-operational Russian satellite. Although this event has relatively limited impact on Iridium’s service, the company is taking immediate action to address the loss. The Iridium constellation is healthy, and this event is not the result of a failure on the part of Iridium or its technology.

We have responded quickly to reroute service around the lost satellite and to work with the various government agencies that track satellites and debris in space to learn all that we can about the event. We are committed to the full restoration of service as expeditiously as possible.

In the meantime, we want to share with you the current status. First of all, as you know, the Iridium constellation is uniquely designed to withstand the loss of an operational satellite, and Iridium is taking the necessary steps to replace the lost satellite with one of its in-orbit spares.

In terms of the impact to our customers, some may experience brief outages during the next three days until we are able to re-route traffic that is impacted by the Ka-band link that brings the Iridium constellation’s commercial communications traffic to Earth. Iridium expects to implement this network routing change by Friday.

Over the course of the next 30 days, Iridium expects to move one of its in-orbit spare satellites into the network constellation to permanently replace our lost satellite.

Source: Stratos

Comments (0) Posted by Lauren on Thursday, February 12th, 2009


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