Interview done!
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They also model Reflect Orbital's stupid idea, showing that with giant mirrors in orbit, the entire night sky worldwide would become as bright as in a typical suburb, even if you're outside their beams.
"A mega-constellation of one million or more satellites would fundamentally alter observing conditions, ensuring that most exposures contain multiple trails during a large fraction of the night. The field-of-view losses then rise to 10%–20%, making satellites the dominant source of data loss, ahead of weather and technical downtime."
But don't worry, we'll be in full Kessler Syndrome long before we get to one million satellites!

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"A mega-constellation of one million or more satellites would fundamentally alter observing conditions, ensuring that most exposures contain multiple trails during a large fraction of the night. The field-of-view losses then rise to 10%–20%, making satellites the dominant source of data loss, ahead of weather and technical downtime."
But don't worry, we'll be in full Kessler Syndrome long before we get to one million satellites!

@sundogplanets I hate that I'm currently legit wondering whether astronomy would be *less* impacted if we go full Kessler Syndrome than it would be if this million-satellite constellation gets launched and actually fails to eat itself.
(modulo the whole "we can't launch space-based observatories any more" thing)
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This figure shows that SpaceX's million data center stupid idea would result in dozens of satellite streaks per exposure (from the FORS2 instrument at Paranal) over half the sky, even an hour after nautical twilight. The part of the sky where you could still do astronomy research would be extremely limited.
The shit hands billionaires and we shouldn’t let China off either because they have their own ideas and I forget what the third major system is now.. but Elon specifically projects this image of the stars as our inheritance. He’s the fucktard that’s all but guaranteeing to cut off our access to space, for I don’t know how long.
He’s gonna blow up space.
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R relay@relay.an.exchange shared this topic
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This figure shows that SpaceX's million data center stupid idea would result in dozens of satellite streaks per exposure (from the FORS2 instrument at Paranal) over half the sky, even an hour after nautical twilight. The part of the sky where you could still do astronomy research would be extremely limited.
@sundogplanets Talking of satellite streaks, how fast, in degrees per minute (or other suitable timeframe) do satellites in starlink level orbits appear to cross the sky?
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"A mega-constellation of one million or more satellites would fundamentally alter observing conditions, ensuring that most exposures contain multiple trails during a large fraction of the night. The field-of-view losses then rise to 10%–20%, making satellites the dominant source of data loss, ahead of weather and technical downtime."
But don't worry, we'll be in full Kessler Syndrome long before we get to one million satellites!

@sundogplanets I wonder how much fuel is budgeted to do the "LEO weave"?
Never mind, what are the odds that there isn't a failure of controlability (uplink comms, onboard processing, thrusters, etc): Tl;dr vanishingly small -
Interview done! Now time to dig in to this really thorough, horrifying paper by Olivier Hainaut about what the night sky will look like with future satellites https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.09427
This is similar to the kind of modelling that I've done with my collaborators, but using totally different code and methods. This is how science works! Predictions are being tested, and unfortunately for the sky, this paper's predictions line up with ours. It's bad.
@sundogplanets If there were the option of these satellites interconnecting, to form a global solar panel, some of us would actually go "hmmm"...
But, not.
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They also model Reflect Orbital's stupid idea, showing that with giant mirrors in orbit, the entire night sky worldwide would become as bright as in a typical suburb, even if you're outside their beams.
@sundogplanets I just had a horrible thought that the businesses who'd be using the "sun any time" service would be car lots. They already try any trick to garner attention, so having their cars lit up like daytime into the dark night might be too much to resist.
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"A mega-constellation of one million or more satellites would fundamentally alter observing conditions, ensuring that most exposures contain multiple trails during a large fraction of the night. The field-of-view losses then rise to 10%–20%, making satellites the dominant source of data loss, ahead of weather and technical downtime."
But don't worry, we'll be in full Kessler Syndrome long before we get to one million satellites!

@sundogplanets Has anyone modelled the Kessle syndrome sky? I wonder what it would look like.
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@redshiftdrift I am extremely aware of that. Just can't fit all the many problems into one thread.
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@sundogplanets I just had a horrible thought that the businesses who'd be using the "sun any time" service would be car lots. They already try any trick to garner attention, so having their cars lit up like daytime into the dark night might be too much to resist.
@jerzone Well, "fortunately" the spotlight size is like 5km. So it wouldn't really "benefit" the car lot only. (Lots of quotes because this is all awful)
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@sundogplanets Has anyone modelled the Kessle syndrome sky? I wonder what it would look like.
@szakib I've thought about doing that simulation, and decided it was too depressing
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@szakib I've thought about doing that simulation, and decided it was too depressing
@sundogplanets yeah...
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Interview done! Now time to dig in to this really thorough, horrifying paper by Olivier Hainaut about what the night sky will look like with future satellites https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.09427
This is similar to the kind of modelling that I've done with my collaborators, but using totally different code and methods. This is how science works! Predictions are being tested, and unfortunately for the sky, this paper's predictions line up with ours. It's bad.
@sundogplanets It's horrible, is the exosphere and thermosphere a lawless place?
Follows Starlink `constellation`: -
R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic