FENGYUN 1C DEB
NORAD 37478
Debris
LEO
1999-025EJY
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LEO · NORAD 37478
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Altitude (km)
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Speed (km/s)
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Latitude
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Longitude
🛰️ Orbital Parameters
Perigee
837 km
Apogee
1659 km
Inclination
99.7°
Period
110.5 min
Mean Motion
13.03589389 rev/day
TLE Epoch
2026-06-25 14:00:00 UTC
📐 Computed Orbital Characteristics
Avg. Altitude1,248 km
Orbital Velocity26,039 km/h
Velocity7.23 km/s
Orbital Period110 minutes
Orbits / Day13.04
Eccentricity0.0539
Semi-Major Axis7,619 km
Est. Orbital LifetimeThousands of years
🚀 Launch & Identity
Country / Operator
🇨🇳 China Meteorological Administration (China)
Launch Date
1999-05-10
Launch Site
Taiyuan, China
Int'l Designator
1999-025EJY
Object Type
Debris
RCS Size
Medium (0.1–1 m²)
📖 About This Object
FENGYUN 1C DEB is a tracked piece of space debris attributed to China, launched on 1999-05-10 from Taiyuan, China on the Feng Yun Yi Beng launch. With over 27 years in orbit, it has far exceeded many satellites’ design lifetimes. It orbits in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) at altitudes between 837 km and 1,659 km with an inclination of 99.7°. It travels at approximately 26,039 km/h (7.23 km/s), completing one full orbit every 110 minutes — that’s roughly 13.04 orbits per day. At its current altitude, the estimated orbital lifetime before atmospheric re-entry is thousands of years. As orbital debris, FENGYUN 1C DEB poses a potential collision risk to operational satellites in nearby orbits and is continuously monitored by the U.S. Space Surveillance Network and other tracking systems.
🌍 Orbit Context
FENGYUN 1C DEB orbits at an average altitude of 1,248 km in the uppermost reaches of Low Earth Orbit. At this altitude, orbital decay is effectively zero without active deorbiting, and coverage footprints are significantly larger than lower LEO, though at the cost of higher latency. Within ±50 km of FENGYUN 1C DEB’s average altitude, there are currently 359 active payloads and 303 tracked debris or rocket body fragments — notable neighbours include ONEWEB-0008, ONEWEB-0007, ONEWEB-0006. With an inclination of 99.7°, FENGYUN 1C DEB passes over latitudes between 99.7°N and 99.7°S, providing near-global coverage including the polar regions. Polar and near-polar orbits are used for reconnaissance, weather monitoring and Earth-observation missions that need to image every part of the planet. China operates approximately 1,221 active satellites in total, of which 5 share a similar altitude band with FENGYUN 1C DEB.
🔗 Fengyun-1C ASAT Debris
This debris object was created by China's kinetic-kill anti-satellite test on 11 January 2007, which destroyed the Fengyun-1C weather satellite at approximately 865 km altitude. The test generated over 3,500 trackable fragments — the worst debris event in spaceflight history — with debris expected to persist in orbit for decades to centuries due to the high altitude. About 2,800 fragments remain catalogued as of 2026.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
FENGYUN 1C DEB orbits in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) at altitudes between 837 km (perigee) and 1,659 km (apogee), with an average altitude of approximately 1,248 km. It completes one orbit every 110 minutes, travelling at approximately 26,039 km/h (16,180 mph).
FENGYUN 1C DEB (NORAD ID 37478) is a piece of tracked orbital debris attributed to China. It was likely created by a fragmentation event, collision, or mission-related separation. Even small debris objects at orbital velocities carry enormous kinetic energy, so they are tracked by the U.S. Space Surveillance Network to enable collision avoidance for operational satellites.
FENGYUN 1C DEB was launched on 1999-05-10 from Taiyuan, China. At its current altitude, the estimated remaining orbital lifetime is: thousands of years. View the full satellite launch log.
Yes — Orbital Radar tracks FENGYUN 1C DEB (NORAD ID 37478) using the latest TLE (two-line element set) data from Space-Track and CelesTrak. Open the live tracker to see its current position, altitude, speed and orbital path updated in real time. You can also browse the satellite directory to find other tracked objects.
FENGYUN 1C DEB travels at approximately 26,039 km/h (16,180 mph) — roughly 7.23 km/s. It completes 13.04 orbits per day, meaning the crew or instruments aboard (if any) would experience approximately 26 sunrises and sunsets every 24 hours.
All tracked debris poses a potential collision risk to operational satellites. At orbital velocities, even a small object carries enormous kinetic energy — a 1 cm fragment at 7.23 km/s has the energy equivalent of a hand grenade. Space agencies perform routine conjunction assessments and may manoeuvre operational satellites to avoid tracked objects like FENGYUN 1C DEB. Read more about debris statistics and the Kessler syndrome.