Starlink Constellation: Deployment, Configuration, and Dynamics
Muaz Ali, Utkarsh Upadhyay, Sean McCormick, Joseph Hill, Beichuan Zhang

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive, data-driven analysis of the actual deployment, dynamics, and operational characteristics of the Starlink satellite constellation, revealing its heterogeneity and continuous evolution.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed empirical characterization of Starlink's real-world deployment and operational behaviors, challenging simplified existing models.
Findings
Starlink's constellation is highly dynamic with ongoing deployment and reconfiguration.
Individual satellites frequently perform collision avoidance and altitude adjustments.
Operational lifespan of satellites averages 4-6 years with a daily failure probability of 0.0128%.
Abstract
Starlink has rapidly emerged as the world's largest satellite constellation and the de facto reference system for low Earth orbit (LEO) networking research. Existing literature predominantly models Starlink as a static, symmetric, and fully deployed structure with uniformly distributed satellites. However, we reveal that Starlink's actual deployment, orbital configurations, and operational dynamics fundamentally deviate from these idealized assumptions. Leveraging satellite observation data spanning 2019 to 2025, we demonstrate that the constellation is highly dynamic across multiple temporal and spatial scales. Macroscopically, Starlink comprises multiple orbital shells undergoing continuous active deployment and reconfiguration. Microscopically, individual satellites exhibit high mobility, frequently executing collision-avoidance maneuvers, altitude adjustments, and intra-orbital…
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