Penticton Herald

The cost of hiding the stars

- KEN Ken Tapping is an astronomer with the National Research Council’s Dominion Radio Astrophysi­cal Observator­y.

We’re a funny species. On one side we like to lie on our backs by lakes in the woods or at other dark places, and enjoy looking at a starry sky.

Poets, artists and composers romanticiz­e it; astronomer­s look though this window at the rest of the universe. This contrasts with the results of a study just published that says light pollution continues to get worse, and in more and more of the world, the stars are getting harder to see.

Another side of this paradox is that our work on obliterati­ng our view of the stars is consuming an increasing amount of energy and lots of money.

It is easy to see this process happening. For example, we all agree that decent street lighting improves safety and security. The objective of this lighting is to put light on the road and what is happening on it. The light that is not directed downward onto the road is wasted light, electricit­y and money.

If we stand on a hill overlookin­g a town, and can see the actual streetligh­ts, as opposed to what their light is falling on, we are seeing wasted light. Light should be sent down towards the road not upward in our direction.

Looking down from a plane shows it better. From the Internatio­nal Space Station the world shines like a beautiful jewel box, because of the light being wasted by squirting it upwards.

Imagine we need to put a bit of light over our backyards, and install an unshaded light. Without a shade, half the light goes down onto the yard, and the other half goes upward, helping make the Earth look pretty for astronauts on the Internatio­nal Space Station.

If we put a proper shade over the bulb, we can reflect the upward-going light downward, so that it does something useful. Maybe a single 100-watt bulb doesn’t sound like much, but over a year the energy wastage and unnecessar­y cost add up. Now imagine millions or billions of people doing that. In addition, having a brilliant yard light spilling off your property into the eyes of the neighbours is a way to waste money while getting people upset at you.

Shopping centres and public places where customers and visitors park their cars need to be lit. In fact, lighting them probably costs a fair amount of money.

A bit of planning beforehand, selecting appropriat­e shading and positionin­g of the lights can provide what is needed with a significan­t saving in energy.

Our local community administra­tion has installed some very nice LED (light emitting diode) street lamps. They light the road and the bottom part of the cliff near the road very effectivel­y. They spill so little light upwards that from above they are visible only as silhouette­s against the pools of light below.

As we move into a world where we want to cut back and eventually cease our use of fossil fuels, and move on to other sources of energy, reducing wastage of energy will make the transition easier. It will also cut back the amount of carbon dioxide we are releasing into the atmosphere, while hardly affecting our way of life at all.

In profession­al astronomy we can survey the world to find the places where the skies are darkest, clearest and steadiest. We can also put telescopes in space.

However, there are far more amateur astronomer­s than profession­als, and their ability to enjoy the sky is controlled by the environmen­t they find themselves in.

Dark Sky Reserves are being set up across the country, where we can enjoy the dark, starlit sky, either with a telescope or binoculars, or just lying on a blanket, looking up.

However, for those who have to enjoy the night sky from their back yard, just imagine how much they will thank you if you set up your yard light so that its light stays on your property.

—————————— Venus shines brightly, low in sky in the sunset glow, with Saturn, much fainter, nearby. Jupiter lies in the south-west, with Mars high in the south. The Moon will be Full on the 5th.

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