Starlink Satellite Breaks Apart Into "Tens of Objects"; SpaceX Confirms "Anomaly"
- On Sunday, March 29, SpaceX Starlink-34343 experienced an "anomaly on-orbit" at approximately 560 km above Earth, resulting in loss of communications with the satellite. SpaceX confirmed the event on Monday, March 30.
- Orbital object tracking company LeoLabs labeled the incident a "fragment creation event" likely caused by "an internal energetic source rather than a collision with space debris or another object." LeoLabs immediately detected tens of objects nearby.
- This marks the second such debris-producing event in just over three months, occurring in a region crowded by over 24,000 objects and about 10,000 Starlink satellites. A similar incident involving another satellite occurred on December 17, 2025.
- SpaceX stated the event poses no new risk to the International Space Station or the upcoming NASA Artemis II mission. The company is "actively working to determine root cause" and will "rapidly implement any necessary corrective actions."
- While the resulting debris is expected to de-orbit within weeks due to low altitude, LeoLabs emphasized these events "illustrate the need for rapid characterization of anomalous events to enable clarity of the operating environment." Frequency raises safety concerns.
29 Articles
29 Articles
A Starlink constellation satellite was unexpectedly deintegrated, raising concerns about orbital safety and possible risks for current space missions. Satellite was suddenly launched into space A Starlink satellite was unexpectedly deintegrated into...
Another Starlink satellite has exploded
Another day, another SpaceX/Starlink explosion. Starlink reported on X/Twitter that "On Sunday, March 29, Starlink satellite 34343 experienced an anomaly on-orbit, resulting in loss of communications with the satellite at ~560 km above Earth. Latest analysis shows the event poses no new risk to the @Space_Station, its crew, or to the upcoming launch of NASA's Artemis II mission. — Read the rest The post Another Starlink satellite has exploded ap…
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