Starlink Satellites pass overhead near Carson National Forest, New Mexico, photographed soon after launch. By M. Lewinsky via wikimedia commons/Creative Commons Attribution 2.0
Starlink Satellites pass overhead near Carson National Forest, New Mexico, photographed soon after launch. By M. Lewinsky via wikimedia commons/Creative Commons Attribution 2.0

EXPERT REACTION: Dying satellites are burning through the ozone layer

Embargoed until: Publicly released:
Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

Old satellites burning up in the Earth’s atmosphere are releasing compounds that could jeopardize the recovery of the ozone hole. New international research has found that ozone-depleting compounds from burning satellites have increased 8-fold between 2016 and 2022. As the number of low-Earth-orbit satellites with short life-spans continues to skyrocket, the pollution could increase to 646% over natural atmospheric levels. Of the 8,100 objects currently in low Earth orbit, 6,000 are Starlink satellites.

Journal/conference: Geophysical Research Letters

Research: Paper

Organisation/s: University of Southern California, USA

Funder: This research is supported in part by the Future Investigators in NASA Earth and Space Science and Technology (FINESST) fellowship, NASA Grant 80NSSC22K1867. J.P.F. is also supported by a Fulbright Portugal Grant for Graduate Studies. K.N. is partially supported by NSF Grant OAC-2118061.

Media release

From: American Geophysical Union

SATELLITE “MEGACONSTELLATIONS” MAY JEOPARDIZE RECOVERY OF OZONE HOLE

WHEN INTERNET-PROVIDING SATELLITES — NOW BEING LAUNCHED BY THE THOUSANDS — REACH END OF LIFE, BYPRODUCTS OF THEIR FIERY DEATHS IN EARTH’S ATMOSPHERE WILL CATALYZE CHEMICAL REACTIONS THAT DESTROY STRATOSPHERIC OZONE

When old satellites fall into Earth’s atmosphere and burn up, they leave behind tiny particles of aluminum oxide, which eat away at Earth’s protective ozone layer. A new study finds these oxides have increased 8-fold between 2016 and 2022 and will continue to accumulate as the number of low-Earth-orbit satellites skyrockets.

The 1987 Montreal Protocol successfully regulated ozone-damaging CFCs to protect the ozone layer, shrinking the ozone hole over Antarctica with recovery expected in the fifty years. But unanticipated growth of aluminum oxides may push pause on the ozone success story in decades to come.

Of the 8,100 objects in low Earth orbit, 6,000 are Starlink satellites launched in the last few years. Demand for global internet coverage is driving a rapid ramp up of launches of small communication satellite swarms.  SpaceX is the front runner in this enterprise, with permission to launch another 12,000 Starlink satellites and as many as 42,000 plannedAmazon and other companies around the globe are also planning constellations ranging from 3,000 to 13,000 satellites, the authors of the study said.

Internet satellites in low Earth orbit are short-lived, at about five years. Companies must then launch replacement satellites to maintain internet service, continuing a cycle of planned obsolescence and unplanned pollution.

Aluminum oxides spark chemical reactions that destroy stratospheric ozone, which protects Earth from harmful UV radiation. The oxides don’t react chemically with ozone molecules, instead triggering destructive reactions between ozone and chlorine that deplete the ozone layer. Because aluminum oxides are not consumed by these chemical reactions, they can continue to destroy molecule after molecule of ozone for decades as they drift down through the stratosphere.

Yet little attention has yet been paid to pollutants formed when satellites fall into the upper atmosphere and burn. Earlier studies of satellite pollution largely focused on the consequences of propelling a launch vehicle into space, such as the release of rocket fuel. The new study, by a research team from the University of Southern California Viterbi School of Engineering, is the first realistic estimate of the extent of this long-lived pollution in the upper atmosphere, the authors said.

“Only in recent years have people started to think this might become a problem,” said Joseph Wang, a researcher in astronautics at the University of Southern California and corresponding author of the new study. “We were one of the first teams to look at what the implication of these facts might be.”

The study was published in the AGU journal Geophysical Research Letters, at open-access journal that publishes high-impact, short-format reports with immediate implications spanning all Earth and space sciences.

SLEEPING THREAT

Because it’s effectively impossible to collect data from a spacecraft that’s burning up, previous studies used analyses of micrometeoroids to estimate potential pollution. But micrometeoroids contain very little aluminum, the metal that makes up 15% to 40% of the mass of most satellites, so these estimates didn’t apply well to new “swarm” satellites.

To get a more accurate picture of pollution from satellite re-entry, the researchers modeled the chemical composition of and bonds within satellites’ materials as they interact at molecular and atomic levels. The results gave the researchers an understanding of how the material changes with different energy inputs.

In 2022, reentering satellites increased aluminum in the atmosphere by 29.5% over natural levels, the researchers found. The modeling showed that a typical 250-kilogram (550-pound) satellite with 30% of its mass being aluminum will generate about 30 kilograms (66 pounds) of aluminum oxide nanoparticles (1-100 nanometers in size) during its reentry plunge. Most of these particles are created in the mesosphere, 50-85 kilometers (30-50 miles) above Earth’s surface.

The team then calculated that, based on particle size, it would take up to 30 years for the aluminum oxides to drift down to stratospheric altitudes, where 90% of Earth’s ozone is located.

The researchers estimated that by the time the currently planned satellite constellations are complete, every year, 912 metric tons of aluminum (1,005 U.S. tons) will fall to Earth. That will release around 360 metric tons (397 U.S. tons) of aluminum oxides per year to the atmosphere, an increase of 646% over natural levels

Attachments:

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public

Expert Reaction

These comments have been collated by the Science Media Centre to provide a variety of expert perspectives on this issue. Feel free to use these quotes in your stories. Views expressed are the personal opinions of the experts named. They do not represent the views of the SMC or any other organisation unless specifically stated.

Associate Professor Annika Seppälä, Department of Physics, University of Otago

We live in an age where space has become very accessible. In the past decade the number of launches per year has increased by tenfold and this is unlikely to reduce in the future. We know there is an environmental impact on the way up, from emission of propellants, as well as on the way down at re-entry, but we simply don’t know the full magnitude of either impact at this stage. 

The authors have made important calculations to work out aluminium loading of the atmosphere from satellite re-entries. This will have further consequences on atmospheric ozone balance and the authors estimate that it would take around 30 years for the aluminium to reach the stratosphere (where the main ozone layer is) from where it was deposited at re-entry. If it was released just a few km lower, it could potentially reach the stratosphere much faster - we need more studies. 

Overall, this is an important part of the puzzle of how our space activities are affecting the atmosphere. My big concern is that we are rapidly heading into a gap in our ability to monitor the chemical composition of the atmosphere, including ozone, across the parts impacted the most: stratosphere and mesosphere. Ironically this is because several key atmosphere monitoring satellite missions are ending (followed by re-entering the atmosphere) in the next couple of years.

Last updated: 14 Jun 2024 12:05pm
Declared conflicts of interest:
No conflicts of interest.
Dr Laura Revell, Associate Professor, School of Physical and Chemical Sciences, University of Canterbury

This study looks at the fate of satellites as they burn up in the Earth’s atmosphere, producing aluminium-containing nanoparticles. While the authors did not quantify the expected impacts on ozone loss, they rightly point out that aluminium nanoparticles are thought to lead to depletion of the protective ozone layer due to their effects on chlorine.

The presence of upper atmospheric chlorine is a legacy from the chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) era. Although they are now banned, CFCs have lifetimes of up to one hundred years or more. Chlorine released from CFCs is effective at destroying ozone when aluminium-containing nanoparticles are present.

The ozone layer should be healing from the effects of CFCs. However, factors such as major wildfires, volcanic eruptions and rocket launches could act to slow its recovery. Satellite re-entry could be yet another factor to slow this recovery, although the magnitude of the impacts on ozone are yet to be quantified.

Just last year, a study was published identifying the presence of aluminium and other metals from spacecraft re-entry in the upper atmosphere, demonstrating that the fingerprint of satellite burn-up on the atmosphere is already measurable.

If CFCs hadn’t been banned, the damage to life on Earth could have been catastrophic. The lesson that should have been learned is that any human activities involving the release of materials into the upper atmosphere need to be scrutinised from an environmental sustainability perspective. Hopefully this study and others like it serve as a wake-up call to ensure we don’t unintentionally create an ozone hole version 2.0.

Last updated: 14 Jun 2024 12:03pm
Declared conflicts of interest:
None. I currently do research on the impacts of rocket launches on the ozone layer, but I do not receive funding for this.

News for:

New Zealand
International

Media contact details for this story are only visible to registered journalists.