Spacc BBS Spacc BBS
    • Categorie
    • Recenti
    • Tag
    • Popolare
    • Mondo
    • Utenti
    • Gruppi
    • Registrati
    • Accedi
    La nuova BBS è in fase Alpha. I post precedenti al 22 luglio 2024 potrebbero non essere trasferibili, ma rimarranno disponibili per la lettura su /old/.

    Just need to scream a little bit about how there are actually hard limits to how much stuff we can have in orbit without severe consequences!

    Pianificato Fissato Bloccato Spostato Uncategorized
    7 Post 3 Autori 0 Visualizzazioni
    Caricamento altri post
    • Da Vecchi a Nuovi
    • Da Nuovi a Vecchi
    • Più Voti
    Rispondi
    • Topic risposta
    Effettua l'accesso per rispondere
    Questa discussione è stata eliminata. Solo gli utenti con diritti di gestione possono vederla.
    • sundogplanets@mastodon.socialS Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
      sundogplanets@mastodon.social
      ultima modifica di

      Just need to scream a little bit about how there are actually hard limits to how much stuff we can have in orbit without severe consequences! It's ok to say that out loud, even if the techbros don't want to hear it!

      It's ok (and vitally important) to have in your list of recommendations for satellites operators "Don't launch so many satellites." This is really pretty key to not destroying the night sky, LEO, and/or the atmosphere.

      sundogplanets@mastodon.socialS 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 1 0
      • gustavinobevilacqua@mastodon.cisti.orgG gustavinobevilacqua@mastodon.cisti.org shared this topic
      • sundogplanets@mastodon.socialS Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
        sundogplanets@mastodon.social @sundogplanets@mastodon.social
        ultima modifica di

        As long as I'm screaming, I hate hate hate that lower altitude orbits has become a standard request from astronomers to satellite operators.

        Lower orbits make satellites blur out more for the specific setup of the Vera Rubin Observatory, I do not know if this is true for any other observatories in the world.

        Lower orbits make satellites brighter and faster, which is worse for naked-eye stargazers and astrophotographers, and presumably for wildlife though nobody I know has studied that yet.

        sundogplanets@mastodon.socialS skyglowberlin@fediscience.orgS 2 Risposte Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 1 0
        • sundogplanets@mastodon.socialS Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
          sundogplanets@mastodon.social @sundogplanets@mastodon.social
          ultima modifica di

          But the worst misconception is that the Earth's shadow will block more of the satellites at lower altitudes. This is true, but ONLY if you are at latitudes closer to the equator than 40 or so.

          If you're closer to the poles (particularly around 50N or S, where I live, and a lot of you in Europe live), the Earth's shadow doesn't help. There's even more naked-eye visible satellites.

          https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-3881/ac341b

          1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 1 0
          • skyglowberlin@fediscience.orgS Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
            skyglowberlin@fediscience.org @sundogplanets@mastodon.social
            ultima modifica di

            @sundogplanets I'm a bit confused here, can I ask a question?

            As a person living a 21st century life, the thing that worries me most about the current developments in space isn't problems for astronomy, it's Kessler syndrome. I thought lower orbits help dramatically with that, because despite the much higher crash probabilities the debris will clear within a decade or two, and then we could maybe re-start the space program and be less stupid the second time around.

            But if you put enough dead satellites at orbits above 1000 km, we can end up screwed for centuries.

            I appreciate your main point that we should simply be more picky about what we launch and why. But arguing for *higher* altitudes given the current "anything goes" launch environment doesn't seem like a good idea to me. Where do you think I'm going wrong in this line of reasoning?

            raucao@kosmos.socialR 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 0
            • raucao@kosmos.socialR Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
              raucao@kosmos.social @skyglowberlin@fediscience.org
              ultima modifica di

              @skyglowberlin @sundogplanets Starlink satellites are de-orbited after ~5 years already. Which means most of the very bright first-gen ones have already been replaced by newer ones that are ~70% less bright, due to adding visors (since June 2020) as well as more mitigation features later.

              sundogplanets@mastodon.socialS 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 0
              • sundogplanets@mastodon.socialS Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
                sundogplanets@mastodon.social @raucao@kosmos.social
                ultima modifica di

                @raucao @skyglowberlin Dude you're completely wrong about Starlink satellites being less bright now: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2507.00107

                sundogplanets@mastodon.socialS 1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 1 0
                • sundogplanets@mastodon.socialS Questo utente è esterno a questo forum
                  sundogplanets@mastodon.social @sundogplanets@mastodon.social
                  ultima modifica di

                  @raucao @skyglowberlin And Starlink quietly stopped using visors many years ago. And made their satellites bigger, and bigger, and bigger.

                  1 Risposta Ultima Risposta Rispondi Cita 1 0
                  • Primo post
                    Ultimo post