Mike has been a guest on the Cold Star Project podcast twice now – see both interviews here –
OUR MISSION
Satellite DFR is a space debris mitigation advocacy group. Our primary goal is to ensure that all future objects launched into earth’s orbit are configured for later retrieval from orbit.
OUR ASKS OF THE SPACE INDUSTRY
- Think long term – beyond the sale, beyond lifetime, beyond passivation to the spacecraft’s ultimate disposal – Design to demise
- Agree that ADR is required to maintain utility of near earth orbit
- Agree that all future designs will be recoverable and advocate for industry cooperation
- Fund R&D efforts to develop recovery techniques and technologies for their designs – including disassembly and materials/component recovery and recycling
- Work with international community to develop global standards for recovery interfaces
- Sponsor internships of students to study satellite recovery and disposal issues – seed the ADR future
- Conduct a reentry risk analysis on all satellites
- Create archive of satellite design and disposal data and hold in escrow for future ADR mission planners
- Agree that ADR is required to ensure future space operations – Maintain your operating environment
- Sign DFR pledge and advocate for industry acceptance
- Include DFR in all RFPs for satellites and launch vehicles
- Fund ADR studies for recovery and disposal of satellites and rocket bodies
- Agree to implement DFR for all LVs components that must remain in orbit
- Change future launch ops to leave nothing in orbit but payloads
- IADC: Remove remediation from Working Group 4 and add a 5th working group focused on remediation to coordinate standards; modify existing, or create new legal constructs; and, facilitate future ADR missions
- Modify the current guidelines to require that all objects launched into Earth orbit be analyzed for their re-entry risk to document whether a controlled re-entry is required or not
- Make mandatory that owners and operators of all space objects be required to provide accurate orbital data for the duration of their object’s time on orbit
- Require all builders of space objects to document their designs (past and present) in an archive for future use by debris removal mission planners
- Update the current space catalog to uniquely identify collisions and all debris generated by each collision, and through subsequent collisions and multiple generations of debris, to accurately provide attribution to the maximum extent possible
- Develop areas of study for students relating to DFR and ADR
- Work with space community to refine areas of study
Satellites, What Are They Made Of?
Imagine, if you will, a future in space. A future, previously well-described in science fiction literature - a healthy space infrastructure has been built with permanent bases in earth orbit, on the moon, including a small outpost on Mars. We’ve been very lucky. The...
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Reference Materials
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