Issue 125

Update: China Attempting World’s 1st GEO Refueling Mission

5-20 July: SJ-21 (49330) and SJ-25 (62485) likely docked with one another on 2 July. As noted previously the two satellites entered into merge conditions on 2 July and remain in that condition through the time of this report (20 July). The Joint Commercial Operations Cell (JCO) has noted the two docked satellites have…

5-20 July: SJ-21 (49330) and SJ-25 (62485) likely docked with one another on 2 July. As noted previously the two satellites entered into merge conditions on 2 July and remain in that condition through the time of this report (20 July). The Joint Commercial Operations Cell (JCO) has noted the two docked satellites have made slight maneuvers over the past 2 weeks. The timeline for China’s refueling experiment is unknown. In the near future I’ll be looking for separation of the two satellites and subsequent maneuvers. To conduct future operations with either satellite will likely require China to make fuel-intensive plane change maneuvers to service/observe other satellites in the GEO belt. Conversely, if China has no future plans for either satellite they would be able to increase the average altitude of both to place them into a “graveyard” orbit.