Everything about Anti-satellite Weapon totally explained
Anti-satellite weapons (ASATs) are
space weapons designed to destroy
satellites for strategic military purposes. Currently, only the
USA, the former
USSR and the
People's Republic of China are known to have developed these weapons, with
India claiming the technical capability to develop such weapons. On
January 11,
2007, China destroyed an old orbiting weather satellite, something not done since the United States shot down a satellite in 1985.
History
The development and design of anti-satellite weapons has followed a number of paths. The initial efforts by the
USA and the
USSR were using ground-launched
missiles from the 1950s; many more exotic proposals came afterwards.
US Programs
US Air Force started a series of advanced strategic missile projects under the designation
Weapon System WS-199A. One of the projects studied under the 199A umbrella was
Martin's
Bold Orion air-launched ballistic missile (ALBM) for the
B-47 Stratojet, based on the rocket motor from the
Sergeant missile. Twelve test launches were carried out between 26 May 1958 and 13 October 1959, but these were generally unsuccessful and further work as an ALBM ended. The system was then modified with the addition of an
Altair upper stage to create an anti-satellite weapon with a range. Only one test flight of the anti-satellite mission was carried out, making a mock attack on the
Explorer VI at an altitude of . To record its flight path, the
Bold Orion transmitted telemetry to the ground, ejected flares to aid visual tracking, and was continuously tracked by radar. The missile successfully passed within of the satellite, which would be suitable for use with a nuclear weapon, but useless for conventional warheads.
A similar project carried out under 199A,
Lockheed's
High Virgo, was initially another ALBM for the
B-58 Hustler, likewise based on the Sergeant. It too was adapted for the anti-satellite role, and made an attempted intercept on
Explorer V on 22 September 1959. However, shortly after launch communications with the missile were lost and the camera packs couldn't be recovered to see if the test was successful. In any event, work on the WS-199 projects ended with the start of the
AGM-48 Skybolt project. Simultaneous
U.S. Navy projects were also abandoned although smaller projects did drag on until the early 1970s.
The use of
high altitude nuclear explosions to destroy satellites was considered after the tests of the first conventional missile systems in the 1960s. During the
Hardtack Teak test in 1958 observers noted the damaging effects of the
electromagnetic pulse (EMP) caused by the explosions on electronic equipment, and during the
Starfish Prime test in 1962 the EMP from a 1.4 Mt warhead detonated over the Pacific damaged three satellites and also disrupted power transmission and communications across the Pacific. Further testing of weapons effects was carried out under the
DOMINIC I series. An adapted version of the nuclear armed
Nike Zeus was used for an ASAT from 1962. Codenamed
Mudflap, the missile was designated DM-15S and a single missile was deployed at the
Kwajalein atoll until 1966 when the project was ended in favour of the USAF
Thor-based
Program 437 ASAT which was operational until 6 March 1975.
Another area of research was into directed energy weapons, including a nuclear-explosion powered
X-ray laser proposal developed at
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in 1968. Other research was based on more conventional
lasers or
masers and developed to include the idea of a satellite with a fixed laser and a deployable mirror for targeting. LLNL continued to consider more edgy technology but their X-ray laser system development was cancelled in 1977 (although research into X-ray lasers was resurrected during the 1980s as part of the
SDI).
ASATs were generally given low priority until 1982, when information about a successful USSR program became widely known in the west. A "crash program" followed, which developed into the
Vought ASM-135 ASAT, based on the
AGM-69 SRAM with an Altair upper stage. The system was carried on a modified F-15 that carried the missile directly under the central line of the plane. The F-15's guidance system was modified for the mission and provided new directional cueing through the pilot's
heads up display, and allowed for mid-course updates via a
data link. The first launch of the new anti-satellite missile took place in January 1984. The first, and only, successful interception was on
September 13,
1985. The F-15 took off from Edwards Air Force Base, climbed to and vertically launched the missile at the
Solwind P78-1, a US gamma ray spectroscopy satellite orbiting at 555 km, which was launched in 1979. Although successful, the program was cancelled in 1988.
USSR
The origins of the Soviet ASAT program are unclear. According to some accounts,
Sergei Korolev started some work on the concept in 1956 at his
OKB-1, while others attribute the work to
Vladimir Chelomei's
OKB-52 around 1959. What is certain is that at the beginning of April 1960,
Nikita Khrushchev held a meeting at his summer residence in Crimea, discussing an array of defense industry issues. Here, Chelomei outlined his rocket and spacecraft program, and received a go-ahead to start development of the
UR-200 rocket, one of its many roles being the launcher for his anti-satellite project. The decision to start work on the weapon was made in March 1961 as the
Istrebitel Sputnikov (
IS) (Interceptor of satellites, or literally "Destroyer of satellites").
The IS system was "co-orbital", approaching its target over time and then exploding a shrapnel warhead close enough to kill it. The missile was launched when a target satellite's ground track rises above the launch site. Once the satellite is detected, the missile is launched into orbit close to the targeted satellite. It takes 90 to 200 minutes (or one to two orbits) for the missile interceptor to get close enough to its target. The missile is guided by an onboard radar. The interceptor, which weighs 1400 kg, may be effective up to one kilometer from a target.
Delays in the UR-200 missile program prompted Chelomei to request R-7 rockets for prototype testing of the IS. Two such tests were carried out on November 1, 1963 and April 12, 1964. Later in the year Khrushchev cancelled the UR-200 in favor of the R-36, forcing the IS to switch to this launcher, who's space launcher version was developed as the
Tsyklon 2. Delays in that program led to the introduction of a simpler version, the 2A, which launched its first IS test on October 27, 1967, and a second on April 28, 1968. Further tests carried out against a special target spacecraft, the DS-P1-M, which recorded hits by the IS warhead's shrapnel. A total of 23 launches have been identified as being part of the IS test series. The system was declared operational in February 1973.
Testing resumed in 1976 as a result of the US work on the
Space Shuttle. Elements within the Soviet space industry convinced
Leonid Brezhnev that the Shuttle was a single-orbit weapon that would be launched from
Vandenberg, maneuver to avoid existing anti-ballistic missile sites, bomb Moscow in a first strike, and then land. Although the Soviet military was aware these claims were false, Brezhnev believed them and ordered a resumption of IS testing along with a Shuttle of their own. As part of this work the IS system was expanded to allow attacks at higher altitudes and was declared operational in this new arrangement on July 1, 1979. However, in 1983,
Yuri Andropov ended all IS testing and all attempts to resume it failed. Ironically, it was at about this point that the US started its own testing in response to the Soviet program.
The Soviet Union also experimented with large, ground-based ASAT lasers from the 1970s onwards (see
Terra-3), with a number of US spysats reportedly being 'blinded' (temporarily) during the 70s and 80s. The USSR had also researched directed energy weapons, under the
Fon project from 1976, but the technical requirements needed of the high-powered gas dynamic lasers and neutral or charged particle beam systems seemed to be beyond reach.The USSR also experimented with military space stations with a capability for anti-satellite duty in its
Almaz program.
In the early 80s, the Soviet Union also started developing a counterpart to the US air-launched ASAT system, using modified
MiG-31 'Foxhounds' (at least six of which were completed) as the launch platform.
ASAT in the era of Strategic Defense
The era of the
Strategic Defense Initiative (proposed in 1983) focused primarily on the development of systems to defend against nuclear warheads, however, some of the technologies developed may be useful also for antisatellite use.
After the Soviet Union collapsed, there were proposals to use this aircraft as a launch platform for lofting commercial and science packages into orbit. Recent political developments (see below) may have seen the reactivation of the Russian Air-Launched ASAT program, although there's no confirmation of this as yet.
The Strategic Defense Initiative gave the US and Russian ASAT programs a major boost; ASAT projects were adapted for
ABM use and the reverse was also true. The initial US plan was to use the already developed MHV as the basis for a space based constellation of about 40 platforms deploying up to 1,500 kinetic interceptors. By 1988 the US project had evolved into an extended four stage development. The initial stage would consist of the
Brilliant Pebbles defense system, a
satellite constellation of 4,600 kinetic interceptors (KE ASAT), of 100 lb (45 kg) each, in
Low Earth orbit, and their associated tracking systems. The next stage would deploy the larger platforms and the following phases would include the laser and charged particle beam weapons that would be developed by that time from existing projects such as
MIRACL. The first stage was intended to be completed by 2000 at a cost of around $125 billion.
Research in the US and Russia was proving that the requirements, at least for orbital based energy weapon systems, were, with available technology, close to impossible. Nonetheless, the strategic implications of a possible unforeseen breakthrough in technology forced the USSR to initiate massive spending on research in the
12th Five Year Plan, drawing all the various parts of the project together under the control of
GUKOS and matching the US proposed deployment date of 2000.
Both countries began to reduce expenditure from 1989 and the Russian Federation unilaterally discontinued all SDI research in 1992. Research and Development (both of ASAT systems and other space based/deployed weapons) has, however reported to have been resumed under the government of
Vladimir Putin as a counter to renewed US Strategic Defense efforts post
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. However the status of these efforts, or indeed how they're being funded through
National Reconnaissance Office projects of record, remains unclear. The U.S. has begun working on a number of programs which could be foundational for a space-based ASAT. These programs include the Experimental Spacecraft System (
XSS 11), the Near-Field Infrared Experiment (
NFIRE), and the space-based interceptor (SBI).
2007 missile test by China
At 5:28 p.m. EST
January 11,
2007, the
People's Republic of China successfully destroyed a defunct Chinese weather satellite, FY-1C. The destruction was reportedly carried out by a modified
medium-range ballistic missile DF-21 with a kinetic ASAT warhead
(External Link
) similar in concept to the American
Exoatmospheric Kill Vehicle. FY-1C was a weather satellite orbiting Earth in polar orbit at an altitude of about 537 miles (865 km), with a mass of about 750 kg (1,650 lb). Launched in 1999, it was the fourth satellite in the
Feng Yun series. The missile was lauched from a mobile Transporter-Erector-Launcher (TEL) vehicle at
Xichang and the warhead destroyed the satellite in a head-on collision at an extremely high relative velocity.
This test raised concerns in some other countries, partly because China didn't publicly confirm whether or not the test had occurred until
January 23,
2007 but mainly because of fears that it could prompt or accelerate an "arms race" in space. The EU stated that "...a test of an anti-satellite weapon is inconsistent with international efforts to avert an arms race in outer space and undermines security in outer space."
(External Link
). These concerns were also reflected in public statements from the governments of the United States, Canada, Australia and Japan. According to CNN, global security analysts stated at the time that the test was most likely aimed at the United States.
(External Link
)
USA-193
USA-193 was an
American spy satellite, which was launched on
14 December 2006 by a
Delta II rocket, from
Vandenberg Air Force Base. It was reported about a month after launch that the satellite had failed. In January
2008, it was reported that the satellite was decaying from
orbit at a rate of per day. On
14 February,
2008, it was reported that the
US Navy had been instructed to fire an
SM-3 ABM weapon at it, to act as an anti-satellite weapon.
This mission is different from "normal" ASAT operations in that the target vehicle is at a much lower altitude (133 nautical miles or 247 kilometers) than would normally be the case.
According to news media, the primary reason for destroying the satellite is the large amount of the highly toxic fuel
hydrazine contained on board, which could pose environmental and health risks should any significant amount survive the re-entry.
On February 20, 2008, it was announced that the launch was carried out successfully and an explosion was observed consistent with the destruction of the hydrazine fuel tank.
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