The Pentagon is developing sensors to pinpoint a ground-based laser attempting to blind one of its spy satellites. The move will be interpreted as a further step towards the militarisation of space, say some experts.
Pentagon officials have privately voiced concern that malfunctioning spy satellites might actually be the target of 鈥渋llumination鈥 by Chinese forces testing such technology.
Last year the Space Superiority Systems Wing, a department within the US Air Force responsible for developing military space technology, called on contractors to develop technologies to 鈥渟ense and attribute鈥 a laser attack, in a program called Self Awareness/Space Situation Awareness (SASSA).
Advertisement
The SASSA system will need to sense a broad range of laser and radio wavelengths. 鈥淪uch warning receivers are known and understood technology,鈥 says Rob Hewson, editor of the journal Jane鈥檚 Air Launched Weapons. The challenge, he says, will be making the technology light enough as well as figuring out precisely where a laser beam is coming from.
This month, Lockheed Martin and Boeing revealed their SASSA proposals. In addition to detecting and identifying debilitating laser attacks, SASSA will also sense attempts to jam a satellite鈥檚 radio transmissions.
The US Air Force wants to fly a demonstration SASSA system aboard TacSat-5, a satellite for testing new technologies that will launch in 2011.
An Air Force obtained by the Project On Government Oversight, describes SASSA as 鈥渃rucial to enabling a full range of US responses from diplomatic to military in the event of hostile action against our spacecraft.鈥
Despite SASSA being a defensive technology, some believe it could make future conflict in space more likely. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a defensive step but one that assumes an attack,鈥 says military analyst Hewson. 鈥淚t is a baby step in the preparation for fighting in space.鈥
Fuelling fears of space-based battles are concerns over two recent satellite shootdowns. In January 2007, China destroyed a defunct weather satellite with a ballistic missile. And in February 2008, the US did likewise, although the satellite targeted was close to re-entering the atmosphere and did not leave a vast cloud of space junk in its wake.
鈥淭he US is becoming more vocal about protecting its satellites after China鈥檚 anti-satellite test,鈥 says Hewson. 鈥淎nd the reason is that the US is uniquely vulnerable because of its massive dependence on space systems for everything from high-tech communications to satellite navigation.鈥
Hewson says the ability to blind a spy satellite using a ground-based laser is real enough: 鈥淚f you can hit the sensor with a big enough burst of energy it will blind optical sensors on a photoreconnaissance satellite. The laser technology to perform this attack has been around since the 1980s.鈥
However, Andrew Brookes, an analyst at the Institute for Strategic Studies in London, doubts that the technology has already been used in anger. 鈥淚鈥檓 not saying somebody isn鈥檛 thinking about it,鈥 he told 快猫短视频. 鈥淏ut I know of no evidence of it being used by the Chinese government.鈥
Weapons Technology 鈥 Keep up with the latest innovations in our cutting edge .