In-situ observations of resident space objects with the CHEOPS space telescope
Date
09/2024Author
Funder
Grant ID
ST/V000861/1
ST/X002217/1
860470
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Abstract
The CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite (CHEOPS) is a partnership between the European Space Agency and Switzerland with important contributions by 10 additional ESA member States. It is the first S-class mission in the ESA Science Programme. CHEOPS has been flying on a Sun-synchronous low Earth orbit since December 2019, collecting millions of short-exposure images in the visible domain to study exoplanet properties. A small yet increasing fraction of CHEOPS images show linear trails caused by resident space objects crossing the instrument field of view. CHEOPS’ orbit is indeed particularly favourable to serendipitously detect objects in its vicinity as the spacecraft rarely enters the Earth's shadow, sits at an altitude of 700 km, and observes with moderate phase angles relative to the Sun. This observing configuration is quite powerful, and it is complementary to optical observations from the ground. To characterize the population of satellites and orbital debris observed by CHEOPS, all and every science images acquired over the past 3 years have been scanned with a Hough transform algorithm to identify the characteristic linear features that these objects cause on the images. Thousands of trails have been detected. This statistically significant sample shows interesting trends and features such as an increased occurrence rate over the past years as well as the fingerprint of the Starlink constellation. The cross-matching of individual trails with catalogued objects is underway as we aim to measure their distance at the time of observation and deduce the apparent magnitude of the detected objects. As space agencies and private companies are developing new space-based surveillance and tracking activities to catalogue and characterize the distribution of small debris, the CHEOPS experience is timely and relevant. With the first CHEOPS mission extension currently running until the end of 2026, and a possible second extension until the end of 2029, the longer time coverage will make our dataset even more valuable to the community, especially for characterizing objects with recurrent crossings.
Citation
Billot , N , Hellmich , S , Benz , W , Fortier , A , Ehrenreich , D , Broeg , C , Heitzmann , A , Bekkelien , A , Brandeker , A , Alibert , Y , Alonso , R , Bárczy , T , Barrado Navascues , D , Barros , S C C , Baumjohann , W , Biondi , F , Borsato , L , Cameron , A C , van Damme , C C , Correia , A C M , Csizmadia , S , Cubillos , P E , Davies , M B , Deleuil , M , Deline , A , Demangeon , O D S , Demory , B-O , Derekas , A , Edwards , B , Egger , J A , Erikson , A , Fossati , L , Fridlund , M , Gandolfi , D , Gazeas , K , Gillon , M , Güdel , M , Günther , M N , Helling , C , Isaak , K G , Kiss , L L , Korth , J , Lam , K W F , Laskar , J , Lecavelier des Etangs , A , Lendl , M , Magrin , D , Maxted , P F L , Mecina , M , Merín , B , Mordasini , C , Nascimbeni , V , Olofsson , G , Ottensamer , R , Pagano , I , Pallé , E , Peter , G , Piazza , D , Piotto , G , Pollacco , D , Queloz , D , Ragazzoni , R , Rando , N , Rauer , H , Ribas , I , Rieder , M , Santos , N C , Scandariato , G , Ségransan , D , Simon , A E , Smith , A M S , Sousa , S G , Stalport , M , Sulis , S , Szabó , G M , Udry , S , Ulmer , B , Ulmer-Moll , S , Van Grootel , V , Venturini , J , Villaver , E , Walton , N A & Wilson , T G 2024 , ' In-situ observations of resident space objects with the CHEOPS space telescope ' , Journal of Space Safety Engineering , vol. 11 , no. 3 , pp. 498-506 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsse.2024.08.005
Publication
Journal of Space Safety Engineering
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
2468-8975Type
Journal article
Rights
Copyright © 2024 International Association for the Advancement of Space Safety. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
Description
Funding: ACC acknowledges support from STFC consolidated grant number ST/V000861/1, and UKSA grant number ST/X002217/1. CHe acknowledges support from the European Union H2020-MSCA-ITN-2019 under Grant Agreement no. 860470 (CHAMELEON). PM acknowledges support from STFC research grant number ST/R000638/1. NCSa acknowledges funding by the European Union (ERC, FIERCE, 101052347). NAW acknowledges UKSA grant ST/R004838/1. TWi acknowledges support from the UKSA and the University of Warwick.Collections
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