This study investigates the escalating density of artificial satellites and debris in Low Earth Orbit (LEO), identifying systemic threats to modern communication and observation infrastructures. By evaluating the current orbital landscape, the research provides a strategic projection for the year 2030 within the framework of Kessler Syndrome risks. Employing secondary data analysis and mathematical modeling, international launch datasets from the 2014–2023 period were rigorously examined. Payloads were classified based on perigee altitude, mission profile, and specific orbital behaviors to facilitate statistical modeling. The findings indicate that the active satellite population is primarily concentrated in the 401–600 km altitude band, establishing this region as a critical risk zone dominated by commercial mega-constellations. An exponential growth model derived from historical launch trends (2014-2022) yields a calculated annual growth rate of r = 0.46. Projections suggest that if current trajectories persist, the total satellite population could reach approximately 84,112 by 2030. Furthermore, orbital dynamics analysis demonstrates that debris situated above 700 km remains largely immune to atmospheric drag, leading to century-long persistence and cumulative orbital pollution. A focused assessment of national assets highlights that Turkey’s strategic orbital infrastructure, including the Göktürk and İMECE constellations, is situated within this "Dynamic Risk Zone". The study concludes that unregulated LEO expansion significantly elevates the probability of physical collisions and optical interference, threatening the long-term sustainability of space activities. Consequently, the implementation of active debris removal (ADR) and autonomous traffic management systems, supported by enhanced Space Situational Awareness (SSA), is imperative for global orbital security.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Ali Atıf Pırtı
Yıldız Technical University
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Ali Atıf Pırtı (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75bbec6e9836116a23a43 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18404822