27 Jul: It appears the Yaogan-36 02 (YG-36 02) triplet has reconstituted its formation. All three satellites (Lead YG-36 02C (54045), Trail1 YG-36 02B (54042), and Trail2 YG-36 02A (54042)) have resumed their previous positions with Lead being ~ 3min 35sec ahead of Trail1 and Trail1 being ~2min 41sec ahead of Trail2. All three are now operating at the same altitude of 496km, however they are not co-planar as the RAAN value of the Trail2 satellite is now 6.7° less than the RAAN for either Lead or Trail1. Lead and Trail1 remain co-planar. The YG-36 02 formation resembles the recently constituted formations for YG-35 02 and YG-36 01 which both have co-planar Lead and Trail1 with a RAAN off-set Trail2. (I know it can be confusing…please see graphics below!)
– China launched the YG-36 02 triplets on 14 Oct 2022. It was the 6th of 15 launches for the YG-35/36/39 constellation.
– The YG-35/36/39 constellation operates in 5 orbital planes with each orbital plane containing 3 triplets (9 satellites total per plane).
– YG-36 02 is co-planar with YG-35 02 and YG-39 01. Note: the original YG-35 02 Trail2 satellite failed and de-orbited on 19 Apr 2024. China replaced it with YG-42 01 on 2 Apr 2024.
Public Service Announcement: YG-42 01 (59395) and YG-42 02 (59557) are currently mislabeled in the catalog. YG-42 01 is mislabeled as YG-42 02 and the actual YG-42 02 is labeled as “Object A”. Little Help 18 SDS!
-From 28 Jan 2023 – 23 Apr 2024 (15 months) YG-36 02A’s altitude decreased 12.5km (495.8 to 483.3). China did not change the altitude of either of the other YG-36 02 satellites. As we know from Jack Anthony’s recent lesson, satellites orbiting at different altitudes will experience different RAAN progression and their orbits will gradually differentiate.
-From 24 Apr 2024 – 25 Jul 2024, YG-36 02C increased its altitude 12.9km and matched the altitude of the other two YG-36 02 satellites.
-Due to the 15 months of altitude mismatch YG-36 02C has an 6.7° RAAN offset.
It appears China is experimenting with having a RAAN offset for Trail2 satellites in the YG-35/36/39 constellation. China launched the two YG-42 satellites which replaced the original, failed Trail2 satellites are also have a RAAN off-set. However, the 6.7° RAAN difference in the YG-36 02 formation is much greater than the 0.9° RAAN difference in YG-35 02 or the 1.2° RAAN difference in YG-36 01. I expect the other Trail2 satellites (with the exception of YG-35 03A/53316 which appears to have failed) will eventually rejoin their formations. I will continue to monitor and provide updates.