SPACE reports Starlink satellites had “to swerve more than 25,000 times between Dec. 1, 2022, and May 31, 2023 to avoid potentially dangerous approaches to other spacecraft and orbital debris,” according to filings with the Federal Communications Commission. The frequency of collision avoidance maneuvers by Starlink satellites is “about double the number of avoidance maneuvers reported by SpaceX in the previous six-month period that ran from June to November 2022.” University of Southampton astronautics professor Hugh Lewis says, “Right now, the number of maneuvers is growing exponentially. It’s been doubling every six months, and the problem with exponential trends is that they get to very large numbers very quickly.” Lewis predicts that regulatory intervention will be necessary to control the growth of space debris in low earth orbit, or else “collisions will soon become a regular part of the space business.”
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Tag: Subscribers
Starlink Passes One Million Active Subscribers Globally
The Daily Mail (UK) reports that SpaceX announced “that its Starlink satellite internet service provider has over a million active subscribers. ‘Starlink now has more than 1,000,000 active subscribers – thank you to all customers and members of the Starlink team who contributed to this milestone,’ the official SpaceX Twitter account wrote on Monday.” The news comes “at the end of a year in which the service, which provides low-latency, high-speed internet at an affordable cost – often to remote areas without existing WiFi – has expanded to yachts, cruise ships and RVs.”
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Starlink Reaches Quarter Million Subscribers
Space News reports that SpaceX now has 250,000 subscribers “for its Starlink satellite broadband service as it looks to move into new markets like aviation.” SpaceX is manufacturing “close to eight satellites a day,” according to SpaceX Starlink Commercial Sales VP Jonathan Hofeller. Hofeller also said, “Connectivity on airplanes is something we think is ripe for an overhaul. The expectation has changed faster than the technology has changed.”
Full Story (Space News)