Skip to main content

SpaceX loses Starlink satellites after geomagnetic storm

SpaceX has revealed that it could lose nearly all of the Starlink satellites that it launched last week after a geomagnetic storm disrupted their deployment.

The company said in a post on its website that a day after it deployed 49 Starlink internet satellites on Thursday, February 3, a geomagnetic storm struck Earth’s outer atmosphere. The phenomenon, which occurs when the sun fires off solar flares, resulted in a change in atmospheric density that will cause “up to 40” of the satellites to imminently lose altitude and burn up.

SpaceX explained that as with all of its Starlink missions, Thursday’s batch of 49 satellites was originally deployed at an altitude of about 130 miles (210 km), some way below the final operational orbit. This initial position ensures that if a Starlink satellite fails to begin functioning as it should, it will quickly deorbit and burn up in Earth’s atmosphere, thereby preventing it from becoming a piece of hazardous space junk.

But the increased atmospheric density caused by Friday’s geomagnetic storm resulted in atmospheric drag on the satellites far greater than seen with previous launches.

The Starlink team responded by placing the satellites into safe mode to make them fly edge-on “like a sheet of paper” in a move designed to minimize the strength of the drag.

However, data revealed that the drag remained strong enough to prevent the satellites from executing orbit-raising maneuvers, with as many as 40 of the satellites expected to lose altitude and burn up in Earth’s atmosphere.

SpaceX was keen to point out that the satellites pose no collision risk as they lose altitude, adding that no space junk will be created, with no parts crashing to Earth, either.

Since 2019, SpaceX has launched more than 2,000 Starlink satellites for an internet-from-space service that currently has more than 145,000 customers across 25 countries. The main goal is to provide connectivity to remote areas, though the service is open to anyone within a serviceable area.

While a number of Starlink satellites are known to have malfunctioned and burned up in the early stages of deployment during previous missions, this most recent event looks set to be the largest single loss of satellites for SpaceX.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Check out these stunning images of SpaceX’s recent Starship test
SpaceX's Starship spacecraft during a test in June 2023.

As part of preparations for the second test flight of its Super Heavy rocket and Starship spacecraft, SpaceX this week performed a static fire test of the latter.

The exercise, which took place at SpaceX’s Starbase facility in Boca Chica, Texas, involved firing the Starship’s six engines for several seconds.

Read more
Watch this SpaceX Falcon 9 booster takes its 12th ride to space
SpaceX launches a Falcon 9 rocket on June 18, 2023.

SpaceX successfully launched its latest mission from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Sunday evening.

The mission sent an Indonesian communications satellite to orbit using a Falcon 9 booster on its 12th flight. The rocket blasted off the launchpad at 6:21 p.m. ET following a delay of 15 minutes due to strong winds.

Read more
SpaceX marks 200th rocket landing with perfect touchdown
A SpaceX Falcon 9 booster landing in June 2023.

SpaceX achieved its 200th Falcon 9 landing on Monday, confirming yet again the viability of its reusable spaceflight system.

The company led by billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk shared footage showing the first-stage booster in the final stages of its descent before making a perfect upright landing.

Read more