(UPDATED 7 Jun 2017 15:50 UT with two new figures showing circular motion of USA 276 around the ISS)
Something odd happened a few days ago, high above our heads. In an earlier blogpost, I discussed in detail how the odd spy satellite USA 276 (2017-022A) was set to make a peculiarly close approach to the International Space Station ISS on 3 June 2017. The spy satellite was recently launched for the NRO as NROL-76 by SpaceX, on 1 May 2017.
With the close approach moment now in history and post-approach observations of USA 276 available (as well as an orbit for ISS based on tracking data, rather than an orbital prognosis), I present my final analysis of the situation in the current post.
With the new data included, we can establish the moment of closest approach as 3 June 2017, 14:01:52 UT. It happened over the southern Atlantic north of the Falklands, near 43o.75 S, 45o.45 W, with a miss distance of only 6.4 ± 2 km (the ± 2 km stems from the fact that TLE predicted positions have a typical positional accuracy of no more than 1 km at epoch).
The latter is significantly closer than the approach distances calculated before the approach (which were in the order of 17-20 km, see my earlier post). Ted Molczan also analyzed the situation and he finds an even closer nominal distance of 4.5 km (but within uncertainty intervals our results overlap).
For the ISS, I used elset 17154.48611204. For USA 276, I used the elset below which I calculated based on amateur observations including my own:
USA 276
1 42689U 17022A 17155.88026473 0.00004763 00000-0 65979-4 0 01
2 42689 50.0047 103.5284 0014136 110.9138 249.3345 15.56256291 00
rms 0.020 arc May 31.92 - Jun 4.90 UT
For detailed purposes like this, the orbit determination is a bit sensitive to what observer data are included. I restricted myself to observers with known high accuracy in the orbital solution above.
click image to enlarge |
click image to enlarge |
Below is an updated animation of the situation:
A table of all close approach moments with distances smaller than 500 km:
DATE UT km
3 JUN 2017 02:28:52 478.5
3 JUN 2017 03:13:37 464.4
3 JUN 2017 04:01:17 413.2
3 JUN 2017 04:46:14 398.9
3 JUN 2017 05:33:41 347.8
3 JUN 2017 06:18:50 333.3
3 JUN 2017 07:06:04 282.4
3 JUN 2017 07:51:26 267.7
3 JUN 2017 08:38:28 217.1
3 JUN 2017 09:24:03 202.2
3 JUN 2017 10:10:52 151.9
3 JUN 2017 10:56:39 136.6
3 JUN 2017 11:43:15 87.1
3 JUN 2017 12:29:16 71.0
3 JUN 2017 13:15:38 26.3
3 JUN 2017 14:01:52 6.4 **
3 JUN 2017 14:48:01 48.8
3 JUN 2017 15:34:28 60.5
3 JUN 2017 16:20:24 112.5
3 JUN 2017 17:07:05 126.1
3 JUN 2017 17:52:46 177.5
3 JUN 2017 18:39:41 191.7
3 JUN 2017 19:25:09 242.9
3 JUN 2017 20:12:18 257.4
3 JUN 2017 20:57:31 308.3
3 JUN 2017 21:44:54 323.1
3 JUN 2017 22:29:53 373.7
3 JUN 2017 23:17:30 388.8
4 JUN 2017 00:02:15 439.2
4 JUN 2017 00:50:07 454.5
Note: as positions from TLE's have an intrinsic uncertainty (about 1 km at epoch time), the values in the table above have an uncertainty of about 2 kilometer.
The distance variation around close approach in diagram form:
click diagram to enlarge |
click diagram to enlarge |
The variation in orbital altitude of both objects around the time of close approach (actual geoid heights):
click diagram to enlarge |
In the following diagram, nominal distances in km in X, Y and Z of USA 276 are measured with respect to the ISS. The X is in the direction of movement of the ISS, Y is perpendicular (lateral) to it, Z is the zenith-nadir direction:
click diagram to enlarge |
[UPDATE 7 Jun 2017, 15:45 UT, revised 21:14 UT] The variation in position of USA 276 with respect to the ISS was such that it effectively circled the ISS at close approaches, both laterally (cross-track) as wel as along-track, as can be seen in these diagrams below. Please note that, to get a more clear diagram, the axes of the first diagram (crosstrack circling) are not to scale. The second diagram is the same figure, but with axes to scale. The third diagram (along track circling) is also to scale:
click diagram to enlarge |
click diagram to enlarge |
click diagram to enlarge |
A collision avoidance manoeuvre is usually evaluated if an object comes within a box of 4 x 4 x 10 km of the ISS.
If upon further evaluation the chance of collision is larger than 1:10000, an avoidance manoeuvre is done, if circumstances allow this.
USA 276 remained just outside the 4 x 4 x 10 km box at closest approach, as can be seen in the illustration below (red box, the situation shown is for the moment of closest approach). The box represents a collision risk in the order of 1 in 100 000.
USA 276 relative to the ISS proximity safety box . Click image to enlarge (image made with STK) |
I remain agnostic on the question whether this close approach was intentional or not (see discussion in my previous post regarding some possible goals would the approach have been intentional).
Ted Molczan published a discussion of pro and contra arguments on the question whether the approach was on purpose or not on the Seesat-L list on June 3. While Ted argues that the April 16 and April 30 postponements of the launch indicate a non-planar preference of the orbit (which argues against intention), this also means that this close approach could have been avoided by picking another launch moment.
While USA 276 remained just outside the safety concern box, it is weird to have your just launched classified payload pass so close (6.4 ± 2 km) to a high profile, crewed object like the ISS.
I can and do not believe for a moment that the NRO was not aware that the launch on May 1 would lead to the close ISS approach a month later. It would be extremely sloppy of them, from a Space Situational Awareness viewpoint, if they were not aware, especially given how close the orbital parameters are to that of the ISS.
So I am struggling to understand why the NRO allowed this close approach to happen, if it was not intentional. This event was bound to attract attention and that harms the classified character of the mission. USA 276 is relatively brigh and the approach was bound to be noted by independent observers. Indeed, some space enthusiasts in Europe unaware of the issue who were out to spot DRAGON CRS-11 and Cygnus OA-7 close to the ISS on June 4, did accidentally spot USA 276 passing some 3 minutes in front of it.
It is also an extremely sloppy thing to do because this close an approach to a high profile object like ISS is politically risky. As the ISS is an international cooperation which includes two parties (the United States and the Russian Federation) that are currently geopolitically on an uneasy footing, sending your military payload so close to the ISS as one party is eyebrow raising.
This, and the timing (the close coincidence with the Dragon CRS-11 arrival at the ISS [edit: this refers to the originally planned date of arrival at June 4, later postponed by one day]) was bound to generate questions and suspicions (as it did). What the NRO did with USA 276 in the last few days was therefore really weird.
But then, the current administration of the USA is doing very weird things, and perhaps someone in the new administration signed off on this without fully understanding the depths of it. The Trump administration after all is not quite the posterchild for competence.
(the video below shows a USA 276 pass I filmed in evening twilight of June 4, at low elevation)