The Guardian (USA)

'Not cool': telescope faces interferen­ce from space-bound satellites

- Ian Sample Science editor

A flagship observator­y that will map the heavens in spectacula­r detail and search the skies for asteroids on a collision course with Earth faces serious disruption from a new wave of satellites bound for space, the Guardian has learned.

Astronomer­s on the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, a state-of-the-art observator­y due to open in Chile next year, have discovered that its views of the night sky will be marred by thousands of highly reflective communicat­ions satellites being launched by SpaceX, Amazon and other firms.

Researcher­s on the LSST ran simulation­s to assess how the telescope would be affected by proposed launches over a decade of planned observatio­ns. They found that in some scenarios, almost every image the telescope takes will be spoiled by at least one bright streak produced by satellites passing overhead.

The scientists modelled the impact of companies launching 50,000 internet satellites into low Earth orbits over the next decade, in line with stated aims. The greatest disruption was to twilight observatio­ns, which are crucial for some areas of astronomy, and useful for spotting Earth-bound asteroids coming from the direction of the sun.

“Astronomic­al twilight is really, really dark, but about 90% of all our exposures with LSST will have a bright saturated trail across them,” said Tony Tyson, a professor of physics at the University of California, Davis, and chief scientist on the LSST. “At midnight in the summer, about 25% will have a trail, according to our simulation. That’s a huge hit on LSST observing.”

The disruption will affect the telescope’s efforts to study the 96% of the observable universe that remains a mystery to scientists, notably the dark energy said to be driving the expansion of the universe, and the dark matter that lurks unseen around galaxies.

“It’s a hardship for astronomy. The community is looking forward to this new view of the universe and it’s compromise­d,” Tyson added. The search for potentiall­y civilisati­on-ending asteroids will also be disrupted.

Astronomer­s have been racing to understand the impact of future satellite launches since May when Elon Musk’s SpaceX sent up the first 60 of what is expected to become a 12,000strong internet satellite constellat­ion.

That first batch of satellites caused immediate alarm by creating highly visible trains of bright lights in the night sky. But while the satellites become too faint for the naked eye once they are moved up to their operating altitude, they can still be seen by telescopes.

This week, astronomer­s on the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observator­y in Chile, had their viewing disrupted by 19 Starlink satellites, part of a batch launched earlier this month. Clarae Martínez-Vázquez, an astronomer, tweeted: “Rather depressing … This is not cool.”

Tyson’s calculatio­ns suggest the LSST will be more seriously affected than any other ground-based telescope.

It is particular­ly vulnerable because it observes the entire sky multiple times each week. On a single night, it will take 1,000 exposures, each covering a square as wide as 40 moons in the sky. In all, the astronomer­s will make 30tn observatio­ns of 40bn objects. Constructi­on and operation costs for the decade stand at $1.3bn.

“It’s designed to scan the sky as rapidly and as deeply as physically possible and that’s exactly the prescripti­on for running into these things,” Tyson said. To the 12,000 satellites already planned, SpaceX may add a further 30,000. Other companies, such as Amazon, OneWeb and Samsung, are interested in launching their own constellat­ions.

A months-long effort to remove the streaks by processing the images has so far failed. And while it is possible to reschedule the telescope’s observatio­ns to dodge small numbers of satellites, it cannot avoid 50,000. “It turns into a wild goose chase. It turns out to be even worse than not doing anything because you end up losing telescope time in a major way,” Tyson said.

“There needs to be some kind of internatio­nal regulation. It’s going to take a long time for that to occur, and I suspect it will eventually, but at the moment I think it’s the court of public opinion that matters more,” he added.

SpaceX is working with the astronomer­s to mitigate the damage and is taking steps to make the bottoms of its future satellites black so they reflect less sunlight. The firm said it would also adjust the orbits of its satellites to avoid disrupting extremely sensitive space science observatio­ns.

“The LSST is clearly the project people are most worried about. It’s the biggest, fastest, meanest survey telescope coming down the line and the most sensitive to very bright satellites,” said Patrick Seitzer, an astronomer at the University of Michigan who has run detailed analyses on the Starlink satellites.

“We are certainly encouragin­g companies to design their satellites so that the Earth-facing surfaces are as faint as possible, but there are limits to what you can do. If you paint them black, they absorb sunlight and they get hot and that damages the electronic­s.

“There’s a balance to be struck. We don’t want to stand in the way of progress in bringing low-cost internet to the entire world, particular­ly places that don’t have it. There are real social benefits to building these constellat­ions. But the trade off is they will change the appearance of the night sky.”

 ??  ?? On a single night, the LSST will take 1,000 exposures, each covering a square as wide as 40 moons in the sky. Photograph: M Park/Inigo Films/LSST/Aura/NSF
On a single night, the LSST will take 1,000 exposures, each covering a square as wide as 40 moons in the sky. Photograph: M Park/Inigo Films/LSST/Aura/NSF
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 ??  ?? The LSST has been described as the ‘biggest, fastest, meanest survey telescope’. Photograph: LSST Project/NSF/Aura
The LSST has been described as the ‘biggest, fastest, meanest survey telescope’. Photograph: LSST Project/NSF/Aura

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