Satellites Over Snow: Arctic Space Systems and the Next Surveillance Arms Race

Author:   Afnan Barakat
Publisher:   Vij Books
ISBN:  

9789377948160


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   05 June 2026
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Satellites Over Snow: Arctic Space Systems and the Next Surveillance Arms Race


Overview

In the Cold War, the Arctic was a corridor for early warning and a proving ground for communications at the edge of the map. Today it is again a strategic hinge, but the decisive infrastructure is increasingly orbital: constellations that promise visibility across ice, sea, and sky, even as the polar environment exposes their limits. The paradox is simple: the region most invoked in claims of persistent monitoring is the region where persistence is hardest to engineer, easiest to overstate, and most likely to fail quietly through bottlenecks far from the sensor. Satellites Over Snow explains Arctic surveillance as a chain of dependencies rather than a single platform. It shows how polar orbits shape revisit and viewing geometry; how ground station networks and relay pathways determine whether collected data arrives in time to matter; and why data latency is often a governance and workflow problem as much as a physics problem. Moving across imaging, communications, and positioning, Afnan Barakat clarifies the trade-offs between resolution and coverage, the realities of downlink scarcity, and the ways interference and congestion can turn ""availability"" into a contested resource. The book also examines how dual-use constellations blur civil and security missions, shifting power towards those who control tasking, prioritisation, and the terms of access. Written for students, general readers, and policy and security analysts, this book offers a framework for judging surveillance claims with disciplined scepticism: What does persistence mean here? Where does latency accumulate? Which links are brittle, and which are genuinely resilient? Readers finish with a clearer understanding of how Arctic awareness is produced, how it can be disrupted without a single dramatic space event, and why the next surveillance arms race will be fought as much through systems integration and institutional control as through new satellites in the sky.

Full Product Details

Author:   Afnan Barakat
Publisher:   Vij Books
Imprint:   Vij Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.576kg
ISBN:  

9789377948160


ISBN 10:   9377948169
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   05 June 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Author Information

Afnan Barakat is a nonfiction writer with a research-driven interest in how technical systems quietly reorganise geopolitics. Rather than treating satellites as distant machines, Barakat approaches space infrastructure as a set of institutions, incentives, and operational chokepoints that shape what governments can know, claim, and contest. That orientation fits the Arctic, where the romance of maps and frontiers often obscures the practical work of downlink schedules, ground access, data workflows, and the politics of who gets timely visibility.Barakat writes in an editorial voice that aims to be precise without being enclosed by jargon. The guiding concern is integrity: separating what space systems can plausibly deliver from what public language implies they deliver, and showing readers how to ask better questions about coverage, latency, and resilience. The book is informed by the long arc from Cold War early warning and polar communications to today's commercial constellations and hybrid public-private data ecosystems. It is also shaped by a belief that the most consequential security dynamics often emerge at the seams between domains - space and sea, signal and decision, sensor and story - where accountability is hardest and assumptions travel fastest.

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