Many of the images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope will be blemished by satellite trails if plans to launch megaconstellations succeed.Credit: NASA/Science Photo Library
Even telescopes far above Earth can’t avoid the contamination caused by commercial satellites.
Blurry streaks of light created by fast-moving artificial satellites are already known to mar images taken by ground-based observatories. Today, researchers report1 in Nature that space-based telescopes will not escape such interference as fleets of private satellites proliferate. The researchers found that in the next decade, satellite trails could taint roughly 96% of the images taken by some space-based telescopes, and a single image could contain as many as 92 streaks.
The findings are “truly frightening”, says Patrick Seitzer, an astronomer at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, who was not involved in the work. “This is a very important study for the future of space-based astronomy.”
Tight space
Around 15,000 satellites launched by various companies currently orbit Earth, and several firms plan to launch groups of thousands more, forming ‘megaconstellations’ that will be used for telecommunications (see ‘Rocketing upwards’). For example, aerospace company SpaceX plans to grow its existing Starlink fleet to some 34,000 satellites.
Source: Ref. 1
To work out what effects these satellites will have, Alejandro Borlaff, an astrophysicist at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California, and his team conducted computer simulations of the view from four low-Earth-orbit telescopes, which either currently occupy space or are soon planned to. They include the iconic Hubble Space Telescope; NASA’s SPHEREx Observatory, which launched in March; China’s Xuntian Space Telescope, set to launch as early as next year; and the European Space Agency’s ARRAKIHS mission, set to launch in 2030.
The researchers simulated roughly 18 months of observations, taking faux space pictures with various numbers of satellites in orbit (see ‘Obstructed vision’). They found that if 560,000 satellites are in orbit — the number that is currently planned for launch — their trails will contaminate from 40% to more than 96% of each telescope’s images. And with 1 million satellites in orbit, the number of streaks per image reaches 165 for some observatories. At that rate, “we will have fewer discoveries, less interesting images and, in general, less knowledge”, says Borlaff. SpaceX did not respond to a request for comment about the effects of its constellation.
The most concerning impact he foresees is that the satellites could easily be confused with Earth-threatening asteroids. “And if your images look like they’re filled with asteroids, it’s very possible that you’ll miss a real one,” Borlaff says. He also worries that satellite streaks might make it more difficult to detect rare, fleeting phenomena such as powerful explosions called γ-ray bursts.
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