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SpaceX and NASA signed an agreement to avoid collisions and share information

Mar 19, 2021, 02:19 IST
Business Insider
SpaceX agreed to move its satellites out of the way of NASA's spacecraft.Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images
  • SpaceX and NASA signed a joint agreement on Thursday to exchange data and avoid space collisions.
  • SpaceX agreed to move its satellites to avoid crashes and near misses with NASA assets.
  • SpaceX has launched well over 1,000 satellites to date for its internet service, Starlink.
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SpaceX has deployed well over 1,000 satellites for its ever-expanding satellite-internet network, Starlink. But running a successful internet service means those satellites will need to avoid colliding with other objects in orbit.

To that end, the company on Thursday signed a joint agreement with NASA to ensure neither organization's spacecraft crash into one another, NASA said in a press release. The purpose of the agreement is to share information and improve space safety, the agency said.

"Society depends on space-based capabilities for global communications, navigation, weather forecasting, and much more," acting NASA Administrator Steve Jurczyk said in a statement. "With commercial companies launching more and more satellites, it's critical we increase communications, exchange data, and establish best practices to ensure we all maintain a safe space environment."

Read more: I tried Starlink, Elon Musk's satellite-internet project, for 3 weeks after moving to rural Vermont. It's a game changer.

The agreement formally defines both NASA and SpaceX's responsibilities when it comes to exchanging data and avoiding high-speed collisions and near misses.

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Under the agreement, SpaceX's Starlink satellites will autonomously or manually adjust their course to steer clear of NASA's science satellites and other devices. In the event of a possible conjunction - a close approach between two objects - NASA has agreed not to move its assets so it doesn't accidentally create a collision.

SpaceX and NASA already have a working relationship. The agency awarded SpaceX a $330 million contract to launch two pieces of a future lunar space station.

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk aims to eventually have at least 40,000 Starlink satellites beaming high-speed internet down to customers on Earth. The service could be especially useful for rural areas that aren't wired for high-speed internet, and the SpaceX also plans to deliver internet to ships, planes, trucks, RVs, and cars.

Starlink's beta service has more than 10,000 users worldwide.

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