Issue 124

Entropy Bites: A Look at the Yaogan-43 01 Constellation

27 Jun: Based on orbital data it appears that at least 3 and as many as 6 of China's 9 Yaogan-43 01 (60458-60466) satellites are no longer maintaining their orbits. As a result the previously consistent YG-43 01 formation has fallen apart as the problematic satellites have decreased their average altitudes due to…

27 Jun: Based on orbital data it appears that at least 3 and as many as 6 of China’s 9 Yaogan-43 01 (60458-60466) satellites are no longer maintaining their orbits. As a result the previously consistent YG-43 01 formation has fallen apart as the problematic satellites have decreased their average altitudes due to orbital decay and are no longer maintaining their relative distances with the other YG-43 01 satellites. China’s Yaogan satellites are believed to be used by the Chinese military for Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) operations.

– China launched all 9 YG-43 01 satellites into a 500km/35° orbit using a Long March 4B rocket on 3 Aug 2024. By 18 Sep 2024 China had maneuvered all 9 satellites into a formation in which the lead satellite was 30-32 minutes ahead of the final satellite in the train (see graphic). The average altitudes for all 9 satellites was ~ 496.5km with an average variance of <300m. As a result the formation remained stable with all 9 satellites staying in order (E, D, G, J, B, A, F, H, C) and maintaining their relative distance from one another.

-YG-43 01 remained in stable configuration until mid-March 2025 (almost exactly 6 months post launch). Beginning on 12 March China began to vary the maneuvering for several of the satellites.

-Maneuver Summary (graphs on following pages):

  • The Good: China continues to maintain the orbits for 3 of the YG-43 01 satellites: 1) C (60460); 2) F (60463); and 3) H (60465). All continue to maintain their average altitudes of 497km and are regularly maneuvering (at least one maneuver per month).
  • The Questionable: There are 3 satellites which have not maneuvered in over a month and are now orbiting below their historical average altitudes: 1) A (60458) last maneuver was 1 May 2025 and SMA is now 491.6km; 2) E (60462) had a maneuver gap from 17 Apr – 22 May in which its SMA dropped from 497.6km to 492.6km; it then conducted 2 maneuvers in late-May/early-Jun to increase SMA to 494km, but has not maneuvered since and SMA is now 492.1km; and 3) G (60464) which has a similar pattern as E, a maneuver gap from Mar-May, a series of SMA increases in early-May and then no maneuvers since 15 May. SMA for G is down to 492.3km.
  • The Bad: Three of the YG-43 01 series have not maneuvered in over 2 months: 1) B (60459) last maneuvered on 19 Mar and its SMA has dropped to 488.1km; 2) D (60461) last maneuvered on 27 Apr and its SMA has dropped to 492.5km; and 3) J (60466) last maneuvered on 12 Mar and its SMA has dropped to 488.3km.

 

Editor’s Comment: We do not know the specific mission or capabilities of the YG-43 01 satellites. However, we do know that China launched them into a specific orbit and operated them in a well-maintained formation for 6 months. Beginning in mid-March the formation began to devolve and only 3 of the 9 satellites are now maintaining their relative positions with one another. If China had been using inter-satellite links to cross-cue between the 9 satellites, that capability is now sporadic at best as 6 of the 9 satellites have shorter orbital periods and are now lapping the 3 satellites maintaining their 497km average altitudes. As we’ve discussed before, operating at different average altitudes also generates a slight difference in RAAN procession and eventually the satellites will no longer be co-planar. This has already happened with YG-43 01 as there is now a RAAN variance of 1.9° between 01B and the three nominal satellites (01C, F & H).