FENGYUN 1C DEB (37000)

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

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

37000

International Designator

1999-025ECG

Decay Date

6/14/2012

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

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

0.0133

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

Satellite Articles

View All Posts »

Learn more about satellites and other related topics.

SpaceX Eyes $60B Cursor AI Acquisition Ahead of IPO | KeepTrack X Report

SpaceX Eyes $60B Cursor AI Acquisition Ahead of IPO | KeepTrack X Report

SpaceX secured a $60B option to acquire Cursor AI while launching its 40th Falcon 9 mission of 2026, deploying 24 more Starlink satellites from Vandenberg.

A Celebration of Earth Day | Photos of Home

A Celebration of Earth Day | Photos of Home

For 56 years, April 22 has been the day the world stops to look at itself. Before that was possible, someone had to invent the view. This is the story of how we first saw Earth from the outside, from a crashed V-2 camera in the New Mexico desert to the Blue Marble that still hangs on classroom walls.

Space Force Buys Second Otter Spacecraft for On-Orbit Servicing | KeepTrack Space Brief

Space Force Buys Second Otter Spacecraft for On-Orbit Servicing | KeepTrack Space Brief

Space Force procures second Otter spacecraft for satellite repositioning. Momentus and NASA sign Space Act Agreement for orbital servicing tests. Pentagon delays contractor review.

Space Force Kills Resilient GPS Program, China Tests Reusable Long March 12B | KeepTrack Space Brief

Space Force Kills Resilient GPS Program, China Tests Reusable Long March 12B | KeepTrack Space Brief

Space Force terminates Resilient GPS satellite program. China successfully tests Long March 12B reusable first stage at Jiuquan. GE and Lockheed validate detonation ramjet for hypersonic missiles.

Space Brief 7 Oct 2025

Space Brief 7 Oct 2025

Explore the latest in satellite communications with Cubic's new terminals, strategic acquisitions by Firefly, China's IoT satellite achievements, and key military updates.

White House Orders Space Nuclear Power by 2028 | KeepTrack Space Brief

White House Orders Space Nuclear Power by 2028 | KeepTrack Space Brief

White House directs NASA and Pentagon to field space nuclear power systems by 2028, with DoD demonstration required by 2031. Game-changer for military satellite power budgets.

SpaceX Preps First February Starlink Launch, Orbital Data Centers Gain Traction | KeepTrack X Report

SpaceX Preps First February Starlink Launch, Orbital Data Centers Gain Traction | KeepTrack X Report

SpaceX readies Starlink 17-32 launch of 25 satellites from Vandenberg. Orbital data center economics draw attention from Musk and Bezos. 9,614 Starlink sats on orbit.

Tianlong-3 Fails on Debut; SpaceX Wins $178.5M Space Force Contract | KeepTrack Space Brief

Tianlong-3 Fails on Debut; SpaceX Wins $178.5M Space Force Contract | KeepTrack Space Brief

China's Tianlong-3 rocket failed during ascent on debut launch Friday. SpaceX secured $178.5M Space Force contract for missile tracking satellite launches beginning 2027.