Three types of collisions have occurred involving
artificial satellites orbiting the
Earth: • Intentional collisions intended to destroy the satellites, either to test
anti-satellite weapons or destroy satellites which may pose a hazard should they reenter the atmosphere intact: • Several tests conducted as part of the
Soviet Union's
Istrebitel Sputnikov programme in the 1970s and 80s, involving IS-A satellites intercepting and destroying IS-P,
DS-P1-M and Lira target satellites launched specifically for the tests. • The 1985 destruction of the USA
P78-1 solar research satellite during a USA
ASM-135 anti-satellite missile test. • The
2007 destruction of the Chinese
Fungyun FY-1C weather satellite during a Chinese anti-satellite missile test. • The 2008 destruction of the
USA-193 military reconnaissance satellite in a
decaying orbit by a USA
SM-3 missile. • The
2019 destruction of
Microsat-R after Indian military launched an anti-satellite weapon (ASAT) to destroy an Indian telecom satellite in a move called "Mission Shakti". • Unintentional low-speed collisions during failed rendezvous and docking operations: • The 1994 collision between the crewed
Soyuz TM-17 spacecraft and the Russian
Mir space station. • The 1997 low-speed collision between the
Progress M-34 supply ship and the Russian
Mir space station during manual docking manoeuvers. • The 2005 low-speed collision between the USA
DART spacecraft and the USA
MUBLCOM communications satellite during orbital rendezvous manoeuvers. • Unintentional high-speed collisions between active satellites and orbital debris: • The 1991 collision between Kosmos 1934 and Mission-related debris (1977-062C, 13475). • The 1996 collision between the French
Cerise military reconnaissance satellite and debris from an
Ariane rocket. • The
2009 collision between the
Iridium 33 communications satellite and the derelict Russian
Kosmos 2251 spacecraft, which resulted in the destruction of both satellites. • The 22 January 2013 collision between debris from
Fengyun FY-1C satellite and the Russian
BLITS nano-satellite. • The 22 May 2013 collision between two
CubeSats, Ecuador's
NEE-01 Pegaso and Argentina's
CubeBug-1, and the particles of a debris cloud around a
Tsyklon-3 upper stage (
SCN 15890) left over from the launch of
Kosmos 1666. • The 18 March 2021 collision between
Yunhai-1 02 and debris from the
Zenit-2 rocket body that launched the Kosmos 2333 satellite (a
Tselina-2 satellite) in 1996. == Spacecraft impacts with moons ==