DebrisWatch I: A survey of faint geosynchronous debris
James A. Blake, Paul Chote, Don Pollacco, William Feline, Grant, Privett, Andrew Ash, Stuart Eves, Arthur Greenwood, Nick Harwood, Thomas R., Marsh, Dimitri Veras, Christopher Watson

TL;DR
This survey used a large telescope to detect faint GEO debris down to 10 cm, revealing many uncatalogued objects with rapid tumbling, highlighting the need for continued monitoring to assess collision risks.
Contribution
First large-scale optical survey of faint GEO debris using the Isaac Newton Telescope, expanding knowledge of debris population and characteristics at this orbit.
Findings
Detected 129 GEO-like objects over 8 nights
Faint debris brightness distribution continues to rise at sensitivity limit
Many objects show rapid tumbling signatures
Abstract
Recent anomalies exhibited by satellites and rocket bodies have highlighted that a population of faint debris exists at geosynchronous (GEO) altitudes, where there are no natural removal mechanisms. Despite previous optical surveys probing to around 10-20 cm in size, regular monitoring of faint sources at GEO is challenging, thus our knowledge remains sparse. It is essential that we continue to explore the faint debris population using large telescopes to better understand the risk posed to active GEO satellites. To this end, we present photometric results from a survey of the GEO region carried out with the 2.54 m Isaac Newton Telescope in La Palma, Canary Islands. We probe to 21st visual magnitude (around 10 cm, assuming Lambertian spheres with an albedo of 0.1), uncovering 129 orbital tracks with GEO-like motion across the eight nights of dark-grey time comprising the survey. The…
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