Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Why Did Last Week's Solar Storm Take out SpaceX's Batch of Starlink Satellites?

By now, the story has gotten around that last Thursday's Starlink mission was struck by a geomagnetic or solar storm on Friday and 40 of the 49 satellites (at last update) were lost as result.  Most coverage focuses on what happened, which is fine.  To me, a better question is why did it happen.

Let me recap the what.  Yesterday's updates on the update sub-page to SpaceX's launches page has the best summary of what happened.  The essence goes like this;

Thursday's launch put the satellites into the desired orbit, with the perigee (lowest point) of approximately 210 kilometers above Earth (130 miles), and each satellite achieved controlled flight. This approach is risky for SpaceX; the satellites are there just long enough to be checked out, but they feel it's better for everyone sharing orbital space to do it this way.  Satellites that pass the checkout fire their onboard ion thrusters to raise their orbit to the desired altitude.  Any that fail their checkout are allowed to re-enter the atmosphere, burning up completely.  The unexpected part was that on Friday, the solar storm stuck. 

The storm heated the upper atmosphere, causing it to expand upward, which then caused the drag on the satellites to increase.  SpaceX reported that their onboard GPS suggested the storm caused atmospheric drag to increase up to 50 percent higher than during previous launches.  The Starlink team commanded the satellites into a safe-mode where they would fly edge-on (like a sheet of paper) to minimize drag—to effectively “take cover from the storm”—and continued to work closely with the Space Force’s 18th Space Control Squadron and LeoLabs to provide updates on the satellites based on ground radars. 

The thing is, this was not a strong solar storm.  There are several ways solar storms like this are monitored, two of the most common and widely available are called the A and K indices (pdf).  They're both measurements of geomagnetic activity, taken differently and so they have different scales.  A very common way to track activity is what's referred to as the Planetary K index, abbreviated Kp. I was able to find the relevant chart in a video that I have more to say about, but first the chart:


The storm that disabled the satellites is marked by the two red bars toward the right on February 4th.  The bars are three hours wide, which helps you visualize the storm's duration.  You'll note an almost identical storm the day before, roughly 0900 to 1200 UTC on the third, which was the night before and morning of the launch. 

The point to emphasize here is that Kp for the storm maxed out at five.  The scale is 0 to 9, but solar storms that raise Kp to five are roughly once a week to once every few weeks events.  During sunspot peaks, I recall days with the Kp at eight or nine for longer periods and in that red (> 4)  color for 24 hours or more.  Further, in the video that graph is from, the narrator says he knows SpaceX has launched into storms this strong before without this kind of trouble.  Which brings us back to the question of why.  

The video is from a YouTube channel that puts together some interesting stuff under the name Suspicious 0bservers (note the zero, not "O"), run by a guy named Ben Davidson.  He's frankly hard to describe, but I think the term he'd use is that he's a catastrophist; he sees evidence for periodic or cyclic catastrophes that appear in history over and over.  Sort of the geological/astronomical equivalent of the people who see history as Kondratiev Waves, Elliot Waves or First through Fourth Turnings. 

One of the topics he talks about often is the wandering magnetic poles we're seeing and our weakening magnetic field.  That's his explanation for why this mission was affected more than others.  I have a hard time with that because while it's well established that there has been a lot of pole movement in the last 20 years, and our magnetic field has weakened, why didn't other missions have the same problem?  If similar solar storms in the last couple of years didn't lead to loss of the satellites, what (if anything) does that say about how much weaker the field has become?   Is it half as strong? 90% as strong?  Down to 1/10 as strong? 

My disappointing conclusion is that I can't answer why.  There have been roughly three dozen launches of Starlink satellites and roughly 1,900 in orbit now.  Granted the last four years have been pretty low in solar activity, but if Davidson is right about them launching in similar solar storms on prior missions, something different happened this time.  Maybe it was some perfectly wrong flicker of the magnetic field or the solar storm that hasn't been documented.  Not knowing what caused it is bound to cause heartburn in the folks deciding if they'll launch under these conditions. 



10 comments:

  1. Maybe they know the reason,, they don't want you to know, so the storm is a good excuse. Foreign interference? A warning from competitor? Aliens? Military mishap?
    I am to the point I believe nothing at all anymore. Everything is suspect.

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  2. I would definitely not discount this as a possibility. At the same time it could have been something else. Hopefully more data will become available. While Ben may be a catastrophist, often times the research ends up showing he was on the right track on several topics.

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    1. Up until fairly recently, catastrophism was pretty mainstream. Everyone knows that they can live near some hill their entire life and then everything changes in a short time when the volcano erupts. It's just that this whole gradual change over "billions and billions of years" (do your best impression of Carl Sagan from Cosmos) took over.

      To me it's like the "nature/nurture" arguments. Most of the time, I suspect it's some of both. Yes, erosion can produce something like the Grand Canyon given enough time. Or it can happen suddenly via a different mechanism.

      The one thing he harps on that makes intuitive sense is the role of electromagnetism in shaping the universe, when you consider how much stronger electric forces are than gravity. His stuff on micro novas and the effects of electric field oscillations in empty space makes sense.

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  3. This was a learning experience. Question being did they learn anything from it and will they be able to compensate adequately for what is apparently a fairly regular risk event. Fortunately no significant harm was done aside from the lost $$$ all launches that go wrong entail.

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  4. There was an unexpected CME that hit, and it apparently caused the drag to go up in addition to the K-index.

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  5. The simplest answer is the most likely. So... Space Communists, the ChiComs from their space station using secret voodoo magnetic laser rays to thrash Musk's satellites because Musk is making fun of their (the ChiCom's) pet monkey Trudeau.

    Or, yeah, random magnetic flux space radiation due to the Sun getting freaky.

    I'll go with the latter one.

    And it proved that SpaceX's method of doing a low-altitude (for space) checkout before moving to active orbits is a smart one. Potentially launching clutter and trash like other people (looking at you, ChiComs and Russia) is a bad thing.

    Even more freaky, the cost of Starlink satellites is so low that SpaceX can launch a wad and discard a bunch of malfunctioning ones instead of spending so much money on a single or a few very expensive satellites.

    What else is SpaceX going to do?>

    Tesla's pickup? Could it be designed not for this earth but for use off-world? Hmmm?

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    1. Even more freaky, the cost of Starlink satellites is so low that SpaceX can launch a wad and discard a bunch of malfunctioning ones instead of spending so much money on a single or a few very expensive satellites.

      Back during the earlier days of the Starlink satellites (ver 1 or 1.1?), I read they were making them faster than they could launch them. It was the fastest satellite production ever.

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  6. The simplest explanation is that they are putting these on the raw naked edge of disaster to satisfy the howling ecomonkeys who are terrified of space pollution. Ten miles further up and there wouldn't be a problem. I suspect they will, indeed, move the initial orbit up a bit such that a failed satellite takes a few months rather than a couple of weeks to make a flaming exit.

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    1. That's probably true. I've seen those howling ecomonkeys (great phrase, BTW) talking about it being too crowded up there. I'd tell them, "imagine we're talking about a balloon - now make the radius of the balloon bigger; is the surface area bigger?" Of course, they think it's too crowded on the surface, too. Sure there are crowded area. And then there's thousands of miles of very low population density.

      Perhaps the most bizarre was some dood over on Teslarati saying, "Elon is making it too cheap to get to orbit. He needs to slow down." Is that because he's making it too hard on ULA, Boeing and Arianespace? Since when is more expensive for the same service better?

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    2. I've been fighting with some twit-wiffle on another forum regarding SpaceX. She-he-it insists that Musk's evil money-grubbing space goons are screwing up the orbits and messing up his-her-its precious sky telescope time.

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