Toronto – October 8, 1998 – A team of Canadian scientists working with the Centre for Research in Earth and Space Technology (CRESTech) outlined today a global operation aimed at safeguarding the world’s 600-plus satellites as they head into the first serious meteor threat of the modern space age on November 17, 1998.

Though the risk of damage from the Leonids meteor storm is considered slight, a number of international satellite operators, including those of the United States Department of Defence, the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency, are working with CRESTech to reduce the odds of impact from the natural space debris forming the comet trail into which Earth will soon pass.

The Leonids are a swarm of metoroids that intercept Earth’s orbit to some
degree every year, usually with little more fanfare than a spectacular night of watching shooting stars. This year, however, the storm will reach levels not seen in over thirty years as Earth travels directly into a path of interplanetary flotsam flung by the four-kilometer-wide Comet Tempel-Tuttle.

That last peak occurred in 1966, at a time when only a handful of small
scientific satellites were in operation. Currently, there are estimated to be well over 600 operational satellites in Earth’s orbit, transmitting
signals 24 hours a day for services such as search-and-rescue, entertainment broadcasts, telecommunications, as well as the global-positioning system (GPS) used by commerce, transportation industries and military forces, among others.

“In the last 30 years, people in technologically advanced countries have
developed a strong dependence on a wide variety of satellite services,”
explains Peter Brown, the University of Western Ontario astronomer leading the CRESTech science team. “Unfortunately, if even one satellite was disabled during the storm, it may not only be a multi-million dollar disaster for its owners but may disrupt services for up to millions of clients.”

Peter Brown is organizing the Canadian science team providing the hurricane-style forecast of the shower’s activities to satellite operators around the world during the peak night. Clients include the United States Space Command, the European Space Agency, the Canadian Space Agency, Canada’s Department of National Defence and several other government and commercial organizations.

For more information, please contact:

Andre Bellefeuille
CRESTech Communications Manager
Office: (416) 665-5464, Cell phone: (416) 707-9120
email

BACKGROUNDERS FOLLOW LINKS BELOW

– good material (ed)

  • Leonid’s at NASA
  • Leonid’s at AirForce
  • Calculate Leonid spacecraft impact probability
    Leonids at Spacer.Com
  • Leonid Danger Elevated But Not Serious
  • Satellites May Be Shattered By Invisible Meteors
  • Leonid Conference Established at Aerospace

    Backgrounder

    CRESTech Observation Campaign for the Leonid Meteor Storm 1998

    Statement of Problem

    Many scientists believe that between 1998-2002 there may be a large,
    transitory increase in the meteoroid hazard in the near-Earth space
    environment resulting from the Leonid meteor shower. The Leonid stream,
    which emanates from the constellation of Leo and orbits around the Sun, has a 33-year travel cycle. It peaks over a three-to-five year time span matching the period during which the parent comet (Comet Tempel-Tuttle) travels closest to the Earth. Historically, there have been observations of over 40 visible meteors per second to ground observer during the climax of these storms. This peak period is normally preceded by a few years of build-up, during which an indication of potential activity can be recorded from the ground. This increase in activity is roughly 10,000 times the norm and results in an accumulation equal to that of several years regular activity in our skies.

    There is a general consensus within the scientific community that some
    enhanced activity will be realized due to the next shower, however useful
    predictions are not possible due to limited historic data. During the last major meteor storm, in 1966, satellites were much smaller and less numerous than today. Today there are estimated to be between 600 and 750 operational satellites in Earth’s orbit. While many space-faring nations, predominantly the United States, have devoted considerable resources to measuring and understanding “space weather” phenomena caused by solar activity and other aspects of the space environment, meteoroid activity has not figured prominently in this effort.

    The hazards to spacecraft result not only from the large number of meteoroids, particularly those of smaller masses, but from the high speed of the Leonid meteoroids (72 kilometres per second). The effects of such impact may range from infrastructure damage to the more serious threat of electro-static discharge generated from such an impact. Such charges could interact directly with a spacecraft’s electrical systems and essentially “short-circuit” the satellite. The latter effect has been proposed as the likely explanation for the loss of ESA’s Olympus telecommunications platform in 1993. All satellites, both military and civilian, at all orbital altitudes are at risk from this natural threat.

    Extensive work has been performed by the University of Western Ontario in
    London, Ontario, under the funding auspices of the Toronto-based Centre for
    Research in Earth and Space Technology (CRESTech), to model the physical
    processes resulting in the appearance of this storm. This unique model allows
    for predictive capabilities so long as appropriate observational data are
    available to constrain the initial conditions. However, observational data is
    not yet sufficient to provide accurate forecasts of the shower over the next
    five years. Observations made in 1997 indicate that, and agree with, the
    recent discussions at an American Institute of Aeronautics and
    Astronautics/Aerospace Corporation Conference proposing that activity level
    may reach as high as 10,000 naked-eye observable meteors per hour.

    The International Program

    In 1997, the primary participants in the project were NASA, the United States
    Air Force (USAF), the Canadian Space Agency (CSA), Canada’s Department of
    National Defence (DND) and CRESTech. With the increasing awareness of the
    Leonid threat, the participants in the 1998 project are the USAF, CSA, DND,
    the European Space Agency (ESA), and a major American commercial operator.
    There is also identified interest from TEKES (Finland), and the Societ¿
    Europeene des Satellite (SES).

    Organization’s participating in the operational portion of CRESTech’s program
    will receive real-time data on the storm’s build-up rate, peak and general
    activity. It is expected that these data will be used by some satellite
    operators to take one of several courses of action in the event that peak
    activity reach dangerously high levels. Among those actions are: changing a
    spacecraft’s attitude (i.e. pointing direction) to avoid being hit in crucial
    or delicate areas; powering down an endangered spacecraft so as to avoid a
    massive electrical discharge; or riding out the storm with enhanced ground-
    station teams in order to react quickly to storm-generated anomalies.

    The Observation Campaign

    Location: The two sites best suited, and thus chosen, for the campaign have
    been determined as south of Ulaan Baator, Mongolia, near the Gobi Desert,
    and at the Royal Australian Air Force’s Tindal military site in Northern
    Australia, just south of Darwin.

    Instruments: The 1998 campaign will employ two methods of data collection:
    radar and Low-Light-Level Television (LLTV) observations. Both are capable of
    measuring the smallest meteoroids (which are the population relevant to the
    space hazard) and each can be used to establish their physical parameters.
    The Mongolia site will host two LLTV sites (each with approximately five
    camera), and the Australian site will host one radar site as well as one
    LLTV site (with two cameras).

    Science Team: The CRESTech science team includes Dr. Jim Jones, Dr. Alan
    Webster, Dr. Kerry Ellis, Dr. Wayne Hocking, Dr. Martin Beech, Dr. Robert
    Hawkes, Ms. Margaret Campbell and Mr. Peter Brown, whom acts as the Project
    Manager. This represents the largest group of meteor specialists in the world
    with a most varied list of strengths. Dr. Hawkes (Mount Allison University,
    Sackville, NB) is the world expert in application of video technology to
    meteor observations and heads the LLTV component of the program working
    along with Ms. Campbell (University of Western Ontario). Drs. Jones, Webster,
    Hocking (UWO) and Ellis (CRC Ottawa) are world leaders in meteor radar
    systems, observations and analysis. Dr. Beech (University of Regina) and Mr.
    Brown (UWO) have studied and adapted models of the stream and liaise with the
    satellite community in an effort to understand satellite effects of the storm.
    No other single group has the equivalent breadth of scientific expertise in
    this field.

    For more information, please contact:

    Andre Bellefeuille
    CRESTech Communications Manager
    Office: (416) 665-5464, Cell phone: (416) 707-9120
    email

  • Leonid’s at NASA
  • Leonid’s at AirForce
  • Calculate Leonid spacecraft impact probability
    Leonids at Spacer.Com
  • Leonid Danger Elevated But Not Serious
  • Satellites May Be Shattered By Invisible Meteors
  • Leonid Conference Established at Aerospace