The Cascade Event Left A Great Deal Of Material In A 600km Orbit. We Were Asked To Address Some Of It.
In late 2013, a controlled fragmentation event initiated at approximately 900km caused a cascade of collisions that propagated rapidly through the 600km shell. The original fragmentation was initiated against a non-operational communications satellite in a process that its originating nation has described, in subsequent international forums, as a “planned decommission procedure.” The international community has described it in other terms. ORC is not entering this debate.
The cascade resulted in the fragmentation of several significant structures occupying the 600km orbital shell at the time of the event. These included a large modular multi-national research facility that had been in continuous operation for over a decade, a reusable crewed orbital vehicle that was docked at the facility during the event, and — caught in the expanding debris field during a scheduled maintenance operation — a crew of [REDACTED].
By 2024, the debris field had settled into a lower-energy cluster between 580 and 620 km. The International Orbital Safety Consortium commissioned ORC to recover fourteen priority objects identified by the IOSC debris characterisation team. The fourteen objects are documented below. Click each entry to expand.
ORC-V1 “Maud” and ORC-V2 “Reg” were deployed simultaneously on 12 September 2024, operating in coordinated sequence through the debris field. The 600km shell remains one of the most densely populated orbital bands following the 2013 event, and the coordination requirement between two active vehicles added operational complexity. Dr. Chen managed both approach sequences from the ground. P. Patel handled Maud. A. Kowalski handled Reg. The two vehicles were never closer than 2.4 km to each other. They did not require rescue.
ORC does not typically comment on the nature of the objects it retrieves beyond their technical classification. We are making an exception in this report because the objects are, unusually, part of the public record. The cascade event of 2013 is documented. The structures that were in that orbital shell are documented. The two crew members who were present and who are recorded as having survived by means that remain [REDACTED] are also documented.
ORC retrieved the hardware. We do this. It is our job. We note, as an aside, that the descent module’s open hatch and the Asian installation’s fired retrorocket tell a story without ORC needing to tell it. We are choosing not to tell it. We have noted both items in the manifest. We are leaving the rest to the reader.
| Commission | International Orbital Safety Consortium · Ref. 2024-C-044 |
| Vehicles deployed | ORC-V1 “Maud” · ORC-V2 “Reg” · simultaneous |
| Mission duration | 44 days |
| Objects recovered | 14 · all as manifested |
| Total mass recovered | 6,840 kg |
| Cascade origin event | 2013 · satellite fragmentation · 900km initiation · 600km propagation |
| Time between cascade and recovery | 11 years · orbit had decayed and stabilised before recovery was commissioned |
| Crew survivors (cascade) | Documented separately · not ORC’s report to write |
| Object 14 (unidentified) | Deorbited · 88 kg · no further action required |
