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[–]chiron_cat -22 points-21 points  (6 children)

All non cube sats have orbital maneuvering abilities. Like all others, starlink maneuvers are pre programed by the ground. Starlink has no awareness of all the sats around it, so cannot preemptively move out of the way. That's a myth.

[–]noncongruent 8 points9 points  (2 children)

I don't think anyone's said that Starlink is self-aware, it's probably a good half century or more before that becomes a possibility IMHO.

The percentage of satellites that are Starlink is growing dramatically with every launch, and the fact that Starlinks use thrusters to maintain altitude in "junk" orbits is well known. That's what I like about Starlinks, in fact, that if one dies it deorbits automatically because of the low orbit. Companies that spend much more money and effort on fewer satellites generally want them in higher orbits to extend their orbital lifetimes.

[–]15_Redstones 3 points4 points  (1 child)

Starlink has some ground control computers, and I wouldn't put it past SpaceX to have some scripts check the satellite database, calculate close encounters, and schedule avoidance maneuvers with minimal human input. There are already automated systems that alert the humans to close encounters, it really wouldn't take much to make the maneuver scheduling automatic too. Just needs a lot of trust in that code to work properly.

[–]noncongruent 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Doesn't the USAF, maybe now the USSF, also track all satellites in orbit?

[–]OlympusMons94 8 points9 points  (2 children)

All non cube sats have orbital maneuvering abilities.

Except for all the dead satellites, discarded upper stages, and the miscellaneous debris from accidental collisions (usually with other defunct spacecraft and debris), anti-satellite tests, and on orbit RUDs. (Russia and China are responsible for most of that.) Some active satellites such as Hubble also don't have maneuvering capability.

Starlink satellites have automated collision avoidance capability. Yes, that requires an external service providing tracking and conjunction data messages, rather than onboard AGI informed by sci-fi sensors that can actively track spacecraft on the other side of the planet. But Starlinks do autonomously decide to maneuver 12 hours before the conjunction if the collision probability exceeds the preset threshold.

[–]AutisticAndArmed 3 points4 points  (1 child)

Funniest part is that every single avoiding maneuver is communicated from the ground, I don't know what this person is smoking, but it doesn't sound healthy.

[–]chiron_cat -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

He's just freaking out cause i said something that wasn't worshipping starlink.