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posted by martyb on Thursday May 30 2019, @02:25AM   Printer-friendly
from the 12000-points-of-light dept.

SpaceX satellites pose new headache for astronomers

It looked like a scene from a sci-fi blockbuster: an astronomer in the Netherlands captured footage of a train of brightly-lit SpaceX satellites ascending through the night sky this weekend, stunning space enthusiasts across the globe.

But the sight has also provoked an outcry among astronomers who say the constellation, which so far consists of 60 broadband-beaming satellites but could one day grow to as many as 12,000, may threaten our view of the cosmos and deal a blow to scientific discovery.

The launch was tracked around the world and it soon became clear that the satellites were visible to the naked eye: a new headache for researchers who already have to find workarounds to deal with objects cluttering their images of deep space.

"People were making extrapolations that if many of the satellites in these new mega-constellations had that kind of steady brightness, then in 20 years or less, for a good part the night anywhere in the world, the human eye would see more satellites than stars," Bill Keel, an astronomer at the University of Alabama, told AFP.

Noting that there are currently about 2,100 satellites aloft, the article continues:

If another 12,000 are added by SpaceX alone, "it will be hundreds above the horizon at any given time," Jonathan McDowell of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics told AFP, adding that the problem would be exacerbated at certain times of the year and certain points in the night.

"So, it'll certainly be dramatic in the night sky if you're far away from the city and you have a nice, dark area; and it'll definitely cause problems for some kinds of professional astronomical observation."

[...] If optical astronomers are concerned, then their radio astronomy colleagues, who rely on the electromagnetic waves emitted by celestial objects to examine phenomena such as the first image of the black hole discovered last month, are "in near despair," he added.

One of the most spectacular sights of my life was being out in the wilderness, far from local light pollution, and seeing the Milky Way shining so brightly that I could not make out any constellations for all the other stars that were now visible. I cannot imagine how concerned astronomers must be to face the prospect of taking long-duration "images' of faint astronomical bodies... and having a satellite fly past at a much brighter magnitude. What, if anything, can be done?


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  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 30 2019, @02:59AM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 30 2019, @02:59AM (#849173)

    No -

    Black may make them less visible, but does nothing to make them also transparent.

    Now broadcasting electronic noise too boot. Yes, other satellite broad cast noise too, but at very great distance, so out of most viewing - basically a fixed in the sky. Or not that many near.. GPS anyone.

    Even small, they are BIG to stars behind them and flying as train... think of looking at the sky while laying under a rail track and with a train schedule to keep. They do not care about your sighting. Play a radio station on the train, the steel blocking the sky and raido blasting your attentae.

    Best to call China and ask them to use their laser satellite and burn them up.

    Musk is doing to bring the ping time down, if some one wanted to DOOM over them. Stupid man.
       

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  • (Score: 2) by janrinok on Thursday May 30 2019, @07:49AM (1 child)

    by janrinok (52) Subscriber Badge on Thursday May 30 2019, @07:49AM (#849216) Journal

    I'm assuming that English is not your first language, because this is quite difficult to read. However, I think that I understand the point(s) that you are trying to make with the exception of the very last line:

    Musk is doing to bring the ping time down, if some one wanted to DOOM over them. Stupid man.

    I've got to admit you lost me on that one... Try to re-read your comments before you press the 'Submit' button please because you might have something important to say.

    • (Score: 2) by Freeman on Thursday May 30 2019, @05:30PM

      by Freeman (732) on Thursday May 30 2019, @05:30PM (#849353) Journal

      Seemed perfectly legible in internet speak to me.

      First rule of Internet Speak, Ignore All Knowledge Up to This Point.
      2Rool UrOld

      --
      Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"