700 debris fragments in the very same orbit in which the sats were deployed
12. How long will orbital debris remain in Earth orbit?
The higher the altitude, the longer the orbital debris will typically remain in Earth orbit. Debris left in orbits below 600 km normally fall back to Earth within several years. At altitudes of 800 km, the time for orbital decay is often measured in centuries. Above 1,000 km, orbital debris will normally continue circling the Earth for a thousand years or more.
Just to give some context on the debris problem of the LM-6A:
This needs to be resolved before launching any more G60 satellites, it's going to get real ugly real fast otherwise.
That's a very nice sentiment, but 4 out of the 7 launches of the 6A have been recorded leaving debris. That's not an anomaly.I don't think it is standard modus operandi for the LM-6A upper stage to produce this amount of debris. Shit happens, but I don't expect this to keep happening.
Therefore how much of the constellation will be launched on LM-6A should have limited to zero relevance in my honest opinion.
Only if they are really debris as in upper stage breakingup.Just to give some context on the debris problem of the LM-6A:
This needs to be resolved before launching any more G60 satellites, it's going to get real ugly real fast otherwise.
This sentence doesn't make sense. First of all, you are saying this is not an anomaly that means you believe this kind of "debris" is within the designer's expectation. Then you quote what US military says as happening 4 out of 7 (57%). A probability of failure this high is certainly an anomaly (the fancy American term for failure).That's a very nice sentiment, but 4 out of the 7 launches of the 6A have been recorded leaving debris. That's not an anomaly.
A brief summary of the Jilin remote sensing constellation and Changguang, its parent company/operator.
The constellation now has 138 satellites in operation and can revisit any spot 35 to 37 times per day. Changguan has also put into operation phase I of its satellite production base, which occupies 97,300 sqm and has an annual production capacity of 100 satellites.
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This is a great news. It was reported earlier that Jilin's final phase (by 2025) would have 138 sats in orbits providing revisit of every 10 minutes. Even considerring that the 300 consists many different types of sats it is still significantly more than the number needed for 10 minutes revisit, meaning that the time gap could be likely halved by 2026. Together with in-situ target identification and intra-sat communication, nothing can get out of site.The chief of Changguan Satellite Technology revealed in an that a new generation of optical and radar satellites are under active development. The company plans to rapidly expand its Jilin-1 constellation to 300 satellites by the end of 2026.
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You might want to police that tone. This is definitely not the thread or forum for it.I'm sorry I had to read through this psychotic rambling, but that is not what the word anomaly means. I take it English is not your first language and I understand your mistake, so let me school you on basic English: anomaly means anything that's not of common occurrence, something that's irregular. Most LM-6A launches presented this problem, therefore this problem isn't an anomaly.
Moving on, you tried to say this is some tinfoil hat conspiracy by the US, but an independent space watching organization reported on this first, so I don't know what the fuck are you talking about here, I'll leave it at that.
Third, what do you call 700 objects left orbiting at 810 km if not debris? Please explain to your psychiatrist this and then report back to us in a more coherent form of thought.