One of Earth’s most important satellites for observing disasters, climate change and environmental destruction went dark in the days before Christmas — and it’s not waking up.
The loss of the Copernicus Sentinel-1B satellite threatens to hamper a host of services, businesses and research — from guiding the response to floods, to tracking oil spills and the melting of polar ice.
On December 23, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) control room in Darmstadt, Germany, detected a defect with the satellite which led to the discovery of a “potential serious problem” with the satellite’s power system.
On Thursday, ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher said the problem continued, despite attempts to fix it from the ground.
“I am aware of the pressure this puts on many stakeholders around the world who depend on the data for which the Sentinel-1 constellation is known,” said Aschbacher. “Investigations on this are being pursued to identify and try to remedy its root cause.”
While imagery isn’t flowing, the connection between ground control and the satellite is still operational, one official familiar with the situation said. The aim now is to try to get the satellite, first launched in 2016 a couple of years after its twin Sentinel-1A, up and running again.
Sentinel-1B was launched as part of Europe’s Copernicus Earth observation network of satellites which beam down high-quality imagery of the planet’s surface. That’s a central part of the EU’s space program.
The Sentinel 1 satellites are used to track changes to the planet at both vast and local scale, in close to real time.