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Experimental DragRacer satellites will test 'Terminator Tape' for space junk cleanup this fall


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Experimental DragRacer satellites will test 'Terminator Tape' for space junk cleanup this fall

 

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An artist rendering of the DragRacer experimental mission, which includes two satellites to test space debris deorbit technologies with and without a space tether.  (Image credit: Millennium Space Systems)

 

An experimental mission to test tether-based orbital debris cleanup method with "Terminator Tape" is slated to launch this fall to test the deorbit

 

performance of two satellites.

 

The Millennium Space Systems mission, called DragRacer, involves two small satellites that are set to launch simultaneously to low Earth orbit (LEO) to

 

measure how fast satellites fall out of space. The goal, the company said, is to study technologies for removing space debris from orbit.

 

One of the satellites will fall from orbit on its own. The second satellite, meanwhile, will use an onboard tether made of Terminator Tape that's

 

designed to speed up reentry and deorbit the craft.

 

The California-based Millennium Space Systems, which specializes in small satellites for national security customers, will use a "Teminator Tape" tether

 

developed by Tethers Unlimited for the tethered deorbit test. The company has partnered with TriSept Corp., a provider of launch integration and

 

management services. TriSept Corp. developed the tether and will be the mission's launch service provider.

 

"We are motivated to study and quantify space tether applications as they will offer the LEO space community worldwide both improved deorbit

 

capabilities and unique propulsive solutions," Stan Dubyn, Millennium Space Systems Founder and CEO, said in an emailed statement. "This orbital

 

debris mitigation experiment exemplifies our commitment to fielding innovative concepts using low-cost solutions."

 

The tether on the experimental satellite, called Alchemy, measures 230 feet (70 meters) long. A timer onboard the satellite will trigger tether

 

deployment a few days into the mission. Millennium Space Systems will observe and evaluate the satellite's deorbit procedure.

 

The untethered satellite, called Augury, us designed for natural deorbit could take up to nine years to reenter Earth's atmosphere and burn up, while

 

reentry estimates for the tether-toting Alchemy satellite are about a month and a half, or 45 days, according to the statement. Both satellites are based

 

on Millennium Space System's Raptor cubesat design.

 

"The DragRacer mission is built on an innovative collaboration between Millennium Space Systems, TriSept, Tethers Unlimited and Rocket Lab that is

 

dedicated to exploring and enabling creative and affordable solutions to the orbital debris challenge," TriSept president and CEO Rob Spicer, said in the

 

same statement. "We look forward to leading the integration effort for this historic payload that could ultimately play an integral role in clearing orbital

 

debris from Low Earth Orbit for years and generations to come."

 

The two DragRacer satellites have already been built and tested for their mission to space. Next, the payload will be delivered to New Zealand and

 

integrated aboard a Rocket Lab Electron booster in preparation for launch, which is planned for this fall, according to the statement.

 

 

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