Academy Study Assesses Technical
Feasibility of Space Weapons
Cambridge, MA, May 12, 2005 – While
congressional leaders and policymakers explore the possible expansion of
space-based military operations, a technical understanding of what is possible
and at what cost remains unclear to many in the debate. “A few very basic laws
of physics have important implications for the way satellites, space-based
weapons, and anti-satellite weapons can be designed and operated,” write the
authors of a new study from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In The
Physics of Space Security, a review of the physics governing a wide variety of
space operations, authors David Wright, Laura Grego and Lisbeth Gronlund
explain the advantages and disadvantages of performing certain military
missions in space.
The authors describe the capabilities of anti-satellite
weapons and weapons in space and how these capabilities compare, in both
effectiveness and cost, to alternative defense systems. They also consider the
options open to nations that wish to defend against these capabilities, and
explain the various methods for interfering with satellite systems and
space-based weapons. The paper offers a clear exposition of physical laws and
concepts as they apply to the deployment of weapons in space. It also includes
detailed technical appendices.
As Wright, Grego, and Gronlund note, “Unless the wider
debate about these issues is grounded in an accurate understanding of the facts
underlying space operations, the discussion and policy prescriptions will be
irrelevant or, worse, counterproductive.” The study provides a foundation for
the formulation of sound, science-based policy.
The Physics of Space Security is one of several
Occasional Papers commissioned as part of the Reconsidering the Rules of Space
project, which is directed by the Academy’s Committee on International Security
Studies. The project seeks to convene parties with diverse interests to propose
a reasonable international framework for the future of space use—commercial,
scientific, and military. Forthcoming Occasional Papers will address the
effects of U.S. space policy on civilian and scientific interests in space and
offer international perspectives on U.S. military space plans. The project is
supported by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York. More
information about the project and about the Committee on International Security
Studies is available online, at http://www.amacad.org/projects/ciss.aspx.
"Founded in 1780, the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences is an independent policy research center that conducts
multidisciplinary studies of complex and emerging problems. Current Academy
research focuses on: science and global security; social policy; the humanities
and culture; and education. With headquarters in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the
Academy’s work is advanced by its 4,600 elected members, who are leaders in the
academic disciplines, the arts, business and public affairs from around the
world.
For more information, please contact Paul Karoff at
617-576-5043.
News
|