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                                                                                            Updated January 7, 2020

Small Satellite Boom Poses Challenges for Regulators


Regulators and policymakers are struggling to keep pace
with small satellites, spacecraft the size of shoe boxes that
are displacing school bus-sized satellites for many
purposes. Smallsats, as they are known, occupy low Earth
orbit (LEO) at an altitude of between about 310 and 1,200
miles above Earth's surface. Many currently in orbit are
about 10 centimeters wide and weigh less than 3 pounds.
They have been used in government operations, but
commercial companies are increasingly building and
deploying them for communications, broadband internet,
remote sensing, and Earth observation missions.

Smallsats are launched in clusters called constellations that
provide coverage and connectivity to greater areas of Earth
than a single satellite can. The 328 smallsats launched in
2018-twice the average number launched annually from
2013 to 2017-accounted for 69% of all satellites launched
that year. Some market forecasts project that by 2030, the
number of smallsats in orbit will multiply exponentially.
This trend is largely attributable to advances in
microelectronics, shorter development and manufacturing
cycles, and lower launch costs. Federal and international
regulators have received applications to launch commercial
smallsats to LEO by the thousands over the next five years.
With more than 1,300 satellites already orbiting there,
including the International Space Station (ISS) with humans
onboard, congestion is growing, creating potential problems
with orbital debris, collision avoidance, and allocation of
limited radio frequencies needed for command and control.


The first satellite launched in 1957 by the Soviet Union-
Sputnik-weighed less than 200 pounds, which would
qualify it as a smallsat as defined by the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Its
functions, however, were limited to rudimentary radio
transmissions. Most satellites launched in recent decades
provide communications transmissions and are far larger.
For example, many communications satellites operated by
Intelsat weigh almost 14,000 pounds and are more than 100
feet long. These satellites typically cost several million
dollars each to build and even more to launch, both because
of their size and the need to put them into higher orbits.
Many smallsats cost a few thousand dollars and can
rideshare on a rocket with other satellites.

During the past 10 years, miniaturization of electronics,
optics, and sensors has made much smaller satellites
technically feasible, stimulating venture capital and defense
industry investments in smallsat companies to meet
growing demand for data processing, global connectivity,
and remote sensing services used for imagery and weather
analysis. In 2018, Boeing, Raytheon, and Lockheed Martin
all invested in U.S. startups focused on smallsat


development. National security applications have helped
secure U.S. government funding for many smallsat design
and manufacturing companies, which has enabled them to
establish themselves financially and demonstrate their
products while seeking to develop business with potential
commercial customers.

The ISS has been an important test bed for development of
smallsats, especially cubesats. Cubesats measure a
standard 4 inches on each side and are modular for easy
scalability depending on mission. Companies began
sending prototype commercial cubesat constellations to the
ISS in 2012. Test cubesats can rideshare to the ISS aboard
resupply missions for a fraction of the cost of an individual
rocket launch. From there, robotic arms and special
equipment aboard the ISS can eject the satellites into orbit.
Between 2013 and 2017, the ISS deployed 725 cubesats,
allowing many smallsat manufacturers to demonstrate their
on-orbit capabilities to investors and providing an income
stream for launch operators.

Figure I. Cubesat Built from Smartphone Parts


Source: NASA, Ames Research Center.


Greater use of smallsats may create communications
problems and increase the risk of collisions in space.

In October 2019, the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) requested the International Telecommunications
Union, the international organization that coordinates
global radio frequency use, to approve spectrum for 30,000
satellites on behalf of Starlink, a program of Space
Exploration Technologies (SpaceX). SpaceX has already
received a license to operate a constellation of 12,000
Starlink satellites in LEO to provide internet services. From
the time of the October filing, SpaceX has seven years to
demonstrate its ability to operate a satellite at the requested
frequency before obtaining rights to the spectrum. It has
launched 180 smallsats so far and plans to launch hundreds
more in 2020. Amazon is planning a constellation in LEO
with more than 3,000 smallsats for high-speed internet
service. United Kingdom-based OneWeb is planning a


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