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Satellite Catalog Number
NORAD satellite identifier
NORAD satellite identifier
The Satellite Catalog Number (SATCAT), also known as NORAD Catalog Number, NORAD ID, USSPACECOM object number, is a sequential five-digit number assigned by the United States Space Command (USSPACECOM), and previously the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), in the order of launch or discovery to all artificial objects in the orbits of Earth and those that left Earth's orbit. For example, catalog number 1 is the Sputnik 1 launch vehicle, with the Sputnik 1 satellite having been assigned catalog number 2.
Objects that fail to orbit or orbit for a short time are not catalogued. The minimum object size in the catalog is 10 cm in diameter. , the catalog listed 58,010 objects, including 16,645 satellites that had been launched into orbit since 1957 of which 8,936 were still active. 25,717 of the objects were well tracked while 2,055 were lost. In addition USSPACECOM was also tracking 16,600 analyst objects. Analyst objects are variably tracked and in constant flux, so their catalog and element set data are not published. ESA estimated there were about 36,500 pieces of orbiting debris that are large enough for USSPACECOM to track.
| From | To | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 70,000 | 79,999 | Expected post-launch orbits. |
| 80,000 | 89,999 | Analyst objects. Objects tracked with insufficient fidelity and objects not associated with a known launch. |
| 90,000 | 99,999 | Uncorrelated tracks. |
| 270,000 | 339,999 | Additional analyst objects. The range will be released for permanent objects in the future. |
| 700,000,000 | 899,999,999 | Reserved for internal use by various systems. |
| 900,000,000 | 999,999,999 | Uncorrelated tracks. |
Space Command shares the catalog via space-track.org , which is maintained by the 18th Space Defense Squadron (18 SDS).
History
Initially, the catalog was maintained by NORAD. From 1985 onwards, USSPACECOM was tasked to detect, track, identify, and maintain a catalog of all human-made objects in Earth orbit. In 2002, USSPACECOM was disestablished and merged with the United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM). However, USSPACECOM was reestablished in 2019.
Before 2020, the catalog number was limited to five digits due to the TLE format limitation. In 2020, Space-Track started to provide data in CCSDS OMM (Orbit Mean-Elements Message) format, which increased the maximum catalog number to 999,999,999.
References
References
- Kelso, T.S.. (January 1998). "Frequently Asked Questions: Two-Line Element Set Format". Satellite Times.
- "SL-1 R/B Satellite details 1957-001A NORAD 1".
- "Frequently Asked Questions". Space-Track.org.
- "Frequently Asked Questions". Space-Track.org.
- Kelso, T.S.. "SATCAT Boxscore". CelesTrak.
- Kelso, T.S.. "TLE History Statistics". CelesTrak.
- "Space-Track.org Space Scoreboard". Space-Track.org.
- (12 September 2023). "Space debris by the numbers". [[ESA]].
- (5 June 2024). "18 SDS just assigned NORAD Catalog Number 60011.".
- (October 10, 2018). "USSTRATCOM expands SSA data on Space-Track.org". [[Air Force Space Command]].
- (October 1, 1991). "Small Satellite Debris Catalog Maintenance Issues". NASA.
- (24 January 2019). "US Policy and Capabilities on SSA". Secure World Foundation.
- (25 November 2020). "The satellite catalog is growing faster than ever.".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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