Planned 1.7 million satellites ‘devastating’ for astronomy: Study
More than 1.7 million satellites could obscure or blot out the view of ground-based telescopes.
A SpaceX rocket lifting off at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida on June 8. The mission will deploy 29 Starlink satellites into orbit.
PARIS – The 1.7 million satellites that companies are aiming to launch into Earth’s orbit in the coming years will have “devastating consequences for astronomy”, new research warned on July 1.
The plans to swarm the planet with huge, extremely bright satellites represent an “existential threat” to telescopes viewing the universe, according to the European Southern Observatory (ESO), which conducted the research.
To retain humanity’s ability to properly explore the night sky, the team of researchers called for a maximum limit of 100,000 satellites orbiting Earth.
The study is the first to calculate how much the constellations of big and particularly bright satellites being planned would impact astronomical observations by making the night sky brighter.
The number of satellites orbiting Earth has now reached 14,000 after surging in recent years, many of them part of trillionaire Elon Musk’s Starlink internet constellation.
Musk’s SpaceX company has announced plans to launch more than one million satellites by 2028 to serve as data centres powering the artificial intelligence boom.
Other projects, such as the “Cinnamon” plans of start-up E-Space and Chinese constellations CTC-1 and CTC-2, would add hundreds of thousands more satellites spinning around our planet.
And US start-up Reflect Orbital hopes to launch 50,000 huge satellites that use giant mirrors to point sunlight back down to Earth, with the aim of providing light during the night.
In total, more than 1.7 million satellites could soon be lighting up the night sky, obscuring or blotting out the view of ground-based telescopes.
“When a satellite crosses what we observe, it makes a bright streak on our image, zapping whatever is behind it,” said ESO astronomer Olivier Hainaut, who led the study published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.
“For the past few years, this has been happening – but it is still manageable,” Hainaut told AFP.
“But if we go from 14,000 to 1.7 million, we are really going to have problems.”
The Reflect Orbital satellites pose a particularly significant threat to dark skies.
Even when their mirrors are not pointed at the observer, the light they scatter will make each one as bright as Venus – which is known as the “morning star”, Hainaut said.
The researchers determined that almost all images captured by the largest camera ever built – part of the new Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile – would be rendered unusabl
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