November 11, 2025

This Week in Amateur Radio

North America's Premiere Amateur Radio News Magazine

Skynet-1A: Military Spacecraft Launched 56 Years Ago Has Been Moved By Persons Unknown

A military spacecraft launched 56 years ago was moved from its orbit – and nobody is quite sure who did it, or why.

In 1969 the UK launched Skynet-1A, a military communications satellite placed in orbit above the east coast of Africa in order to relay information to British armed forces. It stopped working due to hardware issues around 18 months after it started operating, and the spacecraft was left to the laws of physics to orbit the Earth – it is now the oldest UK spacecraft still in space.

It’s a good idea to check on defunct satellites, to make sure the space debris is not on course to collide with any working satellites or populated areas of the Earth below. In the 1970s, when the satellite was closely tracked, it was in a geostationary arc at a longitude of around 40 East, where it remained when it was decommissioned. Such orbits are subject to gravitational perturbations by the Sun, Earth and Moon.

“If Skynet-1A had failed at its operational location of around 40 East, we would now expect it to be oscillating by +/- 35 degrees either side of 75 East,” satellite-system engineer Dr Stuart Eves explains in a blog post for The Global Network on Sustainability in Space.

“Except that it isn’t. According to the UK Registry , Skynet-1A is currently sitting very close to the bottom of the other well at 105 West, oscillating by just a couple of degrees.”

Read more – IFLScience: http://bit.ly/493FBUT