FENGYUN 1C DEB (30436)

COSPAR: 1999-025AEX | Alt Name: deb FY-1C

Image
FENGYUN 1C DEB Satellite Image
Additional Sources
Launch Details

Launch Date

May 10, 1999

Launch Site

TAISC

Launch Pad

LC7

Launch Vehicle

Chang Zheng 4B

Orbital Elements

NORAD ID

30436

International Designator

1999-025AEX

Epoch

Sat, 04 Jul 2026 04:32:36 GMT

Apogee

Calculating...

Perigee

Calculating...

Inclination

98.42°

Right Ascension

75.53°

Eccentricity

Calculating...

Argument of Perigee

260.93°

Period

101.10 min

Mean Motion

14.24 rev/day

Latitude

Calculating...

Longitude

Calculating...

Altitude

Calculating...

Velocity

Calculating...

Polar Plot
3D Visualization
Basic Satellite Info

Name

FENGYUN 1C DEB

Alternative Name

deb FY-1C

Type

Debris

Status

Space Junk

Owner

CASC

Country

China

Constellation

N/A

Related Satellites

Major Events

N/A

Latest TLEs
1 30436U 99025AEX 26185.18930906  .00004544  00000-0  18966-2 0  9998
2 30436  98.4151  75.5344 0093411 260.9340 251.5949 14.24323191993316

Source: Celestrak

Summary
Space debris, also known as space junk, encompasses all non-functional objects orbiting Earth such as defunct satellites, spent rocket stages, and fragments from collisions or disintegrations. Over time, this debris can accumulate and create an increasingly hazardous environment in orbit. Even tiny fragments, traveling at extremely high velocities, can inflict significant damage on operational satellites and spacecraft. If left unmanaged, the density of debris raises the risk of catastrophic collisions and further fragmentation, compounding the problem and threatening the safety and sustainability of space activities.
Physical Characteristics

Length

0

Diameter

0

Span

0

Dry Mass

0

Launch Mass

0

Shape

N/A

Radar Cross Section

0.025

Visual Magnitude

Unknown

Color

Unknown

Material Composition

Unknown

Technical Details

Payload

Unknown

Purpose

Unknown

Mission

Unknown

Manufacturer

Unknown

Life Expectancy

Unknown

Bus

Unknown

Configuration

Unknown

Motor

Unknown

Equipment

Unknown

Power System

Unknown

ADCS

Unknown

Transmitter Frequency

Unknown

Map
This tool will help you track the satellite's position and predict its upcoming passes over your location. Simply input the coordinates or click the geolocation button to get started.
Next Pass
Azimuth Elevation Time (Local)
Start Azimuth
Max Elevation
Stop Azimuth
Time Until
Pass Duration

Satellite Articles

View All Posts »

Learn more about satellites and other related topics.

New Glenn Static Fire Anomaly Grounds Amazon Launch | KeepTrack Space Brief

New Glenn Static Fire Anomaly Grounds Amazon Launch | KeepTrack Space Brief

Blue Origin's New Glenn suffered catastrophic anomaly during static fire test at LC-36. Amazon LEO satellites pulled; NASA lunar missions now in question.

SpaceX IPO Surges 20% on First Day of Trading | KeepTrack X Report

SpaceX IPO Surges 20% on First Day of Trading | KeepTrack X Report

SpaceX shares jumped nearly 20% in its historic public debut, valuing the company partly on Starlink's AI infrastructure potential with 10,636 satellites working.

SpaceX Launches GPS Satellite Tonight, Starship V3 Targets Mid-March | KeepTrack X Report

SpaceX Launches GPS Satellite Tonight, Starship V3 Targets Mid-March | KeepTrack X Report

SpaceX to launch GPS III SV09 satellite for Space Force at 11:38 p.m. EST from Cape Canaveral. Musk confirms Starship V3 with Raptor V3 engines targets mid-March first flight.

Space Brief 19 Nov 2025

Space Brief 19 Nov 2025

Today's Space Brief covers the latest developments in space debris detection, Ursa Major's defense push, and SpaceX's Starlink launch. Additionally, insights into microreactors for military bases, US Cyber Command updates, and gravitational wave discoveries are highlighted.

X Report 24 Sep 2025

X Report 24 Sep 2025

SpaceX prepares for the launch of significant NASA and NOAA missions, while Starship's 11th test flight edges closer.

The Day America Sent Two Secrets to the Sky

The Day America Sent Two Secrets to the Sky

Sixty-five years ago, America launched two very different space missions within hours of each other - one broadcast live to a fascinated nation, the other quietly reaching orbit from a fog-shrouded California launchpad while no one was watching

Vulcan Set to Open 2026 With USSF-87 National Security Launch | KeepTrack Space Brief

Vulcan Set to Open 2026 With USSF-87 National Security Launch | KeepTrack Space Brief

ULA's Vulcan rocket preps for USSF-87 national security launch to open 2026. Sierra Space delivers SDA Tranche 2 satellites three months early. NASA delays spacewalk for Crew-11 medical issue.

LeoLabs and the Business of Watching Everything

LeoLabs and the Business of Watching Everything

A startup built on Cold War-era radar science now tracks 25,000 objects in orbit - and the Pentagon can't get enough of it. But can its radars really compete with the Space Surveillance Network?