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With my son Dominic Benford, we made a quick estimate of approaches to raising the ISS orbit by several hundred kilometers to ensure its long-term availability. We concluded that they were two approaches that were viable:
The first is to use ion rockets to gradually raise the orbit over the next decade. Note that the present Chinese space station, which is only ~20 percent of the mass of ISS, is using ion rockets to stabilize its orbit now. They estimate that they can keep it in the same orbit, about the same altitude as ISS, for the next 15 years with these rockets, which is the lifetime of the station itself.
The second approach is to use a series of Starship launches to first attach a coupling to ISS that would allow a Starship boost to higher orbit over a period of about half an hour. This will require a refueling Starship mission. There are six raptor engines on the second stage of Starship. One could use only one engine with the entire fuel load to boost the ISS to 600 km in about half an hour. It would require an acceleration of 1/6th of a gee, which the station is likely to be able to accommodate.
So in principle, is possible to save the ISS for later use.
Jim Benford
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Tim Cash
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Do you refer to the higher risk of a large object being hit by other space debris?
The object in question would be able to dodge based on data from an Earth orbit traffic control system.
The components of such a system already exist but it needs integration and authority.
If this is the problem, how then could we build any large object in Earth Orbit?
John S
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Tim Cash
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I want to emphasize that an initial higher orbit for the ISS does not have to be the final storage orbit.
All that is needed is to keep it high enough from de-orbiting and out of the way of the densest orbital paths and planes.
It can then be moved later to a display or storage orbit.
John S
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