Japanese satellite Hitomi: Lost in space?

Engineers are scrambling to save a satellite,and more than a quarter of a billion dollars of investment, tumbling out of control. The satellite Hitomi was launched last month. It was designed to study energetic space objects such as supermassive black holes, neutron stars, and galaxy clusters, by observing X-rays and gamma-rays.
 
On Saturday, the US Joint Space Operations Center (JSpOC), which tracks space debris, detected five small objects around the satellite. Ground control in Japan managed brief contact with the spacecraft after that, but then lost contact. The satellite also appeared to show a sudden change of course, and observers on Earth have seen it appearing to flash, suggesting it may be tumbling.
 
The next day, JSpOC referred to the event as a "breakup", although experts have clarified that Hitomi may well be mostly intact. The Japanese space agency (Jaxa) told the BBC it did not know right now, and that the agency was still trying to restore communications with Hitomi.
 
Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, told Associated Press that two possibilities were that the spacecraft might have suffered a battery explosion or a gas leak, putting it into a spin and out of contact.
 
"To hear that they’ve run into this piece of bad luck, it’s so very sad. I know enough about how the sausage was made to know that this could have easily have happened to us. Space is very unforgiving."
 
But Prof Goh Cher Hiang, project director of the satellite programme at the National University of Singapore, told the BBC that thanks to monitoring and backup systems, battery explosions were "very rare", and while a leak in the pressurised fuel tanks found on satellites could cause the trouble, "the designer of it can give us some kind of clue".
 
External factors could also be a reason, he added. "It could also be from a collision with something in space, either from outer space or a man-made object already in space."
 
If it turns out to have been lost, it will be particularly unfortunate for those hoping to study black holes after the news last month that gravitational waves from the collision of two black holes had been detected.