Solar maximum just knocked 3 satellites out of orbit. Here's why more may be on the way.

The Sun's activity is what gives us beautiful auroras — but it also has dramatic negative effects on satellites that go around Earth in a low orbit.

A photo of very small, black cube-shaped satellites in space with the ISS in the background
(Image credit: NASA/JAXA)

In early November, three tiny Australian satellites from Curtin University's Binar Space Program burned up in Earth's atmosphere. That was always going to happen. In fact, Binar means "fireball" in the Noongar language of the First Nations people of Perth.

When a satellite is in low Earth orbit (2,000km or less), it experiences orbital decay as it drags closer and closer to the surface, eventually burning up.

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Kyle McMullan
PhD Candidate in Aerospace Engineering, Curtin University

Kyle McMullan graduated from Curtin University in 2021 with a Bachelor of Engineering. That year he began a PhD in aerospace engineering with the Binar Space Program. He has worked with them as both a student and a professional engineer until the present, primarily working on systems engineering, and dynamic modelling and control.