Submitted via IRC for Bytram
On the morning of June 17, the Luxembourg-based satellite operator SES lost control of a large satellite in geostationary space, nearly 36,000km above the Earth's surface. Shortly after, the satellite operator began working with another company that specializes in space situational awareness to track the drifting machine, AMC-9. A few days ago that company, ExoAnalytic Solutions, saw the AMC-9 satellite begin to fragment.
"We have seen several pieces come off of it over the past several days," ExoAnalytic's chief executive officer, Doug Hendrix, told Ars. "We are tracking at least one of the pieces. I would hesitate to say we know for sure what happened."
Sunday 11am ET Update: In response to a query from Ars, the AMC-9 satellite's operator, Luxembourg-based SES, issued the following statement on Sunday morning:
In the early hours of 1st July, the SES Satellite Control reestablished contact to AMC-9. SES and the satellite manufacturer Thales are working around the clock to evaluate the status and define the next steps.
Tracking information received on 29 June had suggested that at least two separate objects were located in the vicinity of AMC-9. Their source has still to be determined. The new piece of information was included by Thales and SES in their investigations.
Kessler syndrome?
Source: A satellite may be falling apart in geostationary orbit
SES's AMC-9 satellite drifting after anomaly
(Score: 2) by aim on Monday July 03 2017, @12:00PM
SES being the biggest player in the satellite business, I'd find it interesting if they were to finance a de-orbiting attempt on this bird.
There are many concepts, they have the pockets for a full-scale test. They'd stand to win on PR and know-now, maybe other players would be willing to help out for the PR alone (think SpaceX quickly readying a pre-flown Falcon 9 first stage etc.).
Readying a full-scale retrieval device would probably be the most difficult part of such a plan.
Then again, time might be less of an issue, as the drift seems to be rather slow.