The main disadvantage of magnetorquers is that very high
magnetic flux densities are needed if large craft have to be turned quickly. This either necessitates a very high
current in the coils, or much higher ambient flux densities than are available in
Earth orbit. Consequently, the torques provided are very limited and only serve to accelerate or decelerate the change in a spacecraft's attitude by small amounts. Over time, active control can produce fast spinning even on Earth, but for accurate attitude control and stabilization the torques provided are often insufficient. To overcome this, magnetorquer are often combined with
reaction wheels. A broader disadvantage is the dependence on Earth's magnetic field strength, making this approach unsuitable for deep space missions, and also more suitable for
low Earth orbits as opposed to higher ones such as
geosynchronous. The dependence on the highly variable intensity of Earth's magnetic field is problematic because then the attitude control problem becomes highly
nonlinear. It is also impossible to control attitude in all three axes even if the full three coils are used, because the torque can be generated only perpendicular to the Earth's magnetic field vector. Any spinning satellite made of a conductive material will lose rotational momentum in Earth's magnetic field due to generation of
eddy currents in its body and the corresponding braking force proportional to its spin rate.
Aerodynamic friction losses can also play a part. This means that the magnetorquer will have to be continuously operated, and at a power level which is enough to counter the resistive forces present. This is not always possible within the energy constraints of the vessel. The Michigan Exploration Laboratory (MXL) suspects that the
M-Cubed CubeSat, a joint project run by MXL and
JPL, became magnetically conjoined to
Explorer-1 Prime, a second CubeSat released at the same time, via strong onboard magnets used for passive attitude control, after deploying on October 28, 2011. This is the first non-destructive latching of two satellites. ==See also==