Planned orbital observatories would see satellites cross nearly all of their images.
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A one second exposure does not collect near the amount of light/photons as 600s...kind of the whole point of a long exposure.Could a workaround be made by changing 600-second exposures to 600 one second exposures, blacking out the satellites from each and then combining? Seems like a process could be made to automate that. Maybe the hardware is not equipped to save that many images.
Could a workaround be made by changing 600-second exposures to 600 one second exposures, blacking out the satellites from each and then combining? Seems like a process could be made to automate that. Maybe the hardware is not equipped to save that many images.
It's all about the signal to noise and how different noise sources scale with what your doing. There's a noise term based on simply measuring the data in the CCD out. So 600 hundred exposures has 600 times the read noise in the CCD's as 1 long exposure.Could a workaround be made by changing 600-second exposures to 600 one second exposures, blacking out the satellites from each and then combining? Seems like a process could be made to automate that. Maybe the hardware is not equipped to save that many images.
It seems to me this issue could be "solved" by demanding that the people launching the constellations also launch a high-throughput orbital telescope above the altitude of their satellites. Maybe more than one. Or maybe a share on a really big one. After all, we demand mining companies put aside money for remediation, this seems similar.
Falcon 9 can launch Hubble, and Heavy can launch it into lunar orbit or the L points. If we simply required 1 of these per, say, 10,000 satellites, we'd have more throughput than we know what to do with.
very hard to move and existing observatory that was not designed for a different orbit.I am curious about one thing - they state that the constellations should be launched to lower orbits. Is there a reason why the observatories can't be raised to higher orbits? This is a serious question - do the observatories need a specific period that only occur with a limited array of orbits?
600 1 second exposures do actually capture (very nearly) the same amount of light as 1 600 second exposure. Unfortunately they also capture 600 times as much read noise (although that will add in quadrature so "only" sqrt(600) times as much). In the long term this is likely to become more common, but sensor read noise is going to have to improve before that is a good solution.A one second exposure does not collect near the amount of light/photons as 600s...kind of the whole point of a long exposure.
Per the article...very hard to move and existing observatory that was not designed for a different orbit.
may swamp future orbiting telescopes
The very lowest orbits will never suffer a Kessler Syndrome scenario. Unpowered objects will decay and fall to the earth faster than they can collide with something else to create more debris. So there's always a workable solution even if the higher orbits are denied at some point in the future.Despite warnings of the various potential issues (including a rather catastrophic one in the Kessler Syndrome) it seems nothing is really getting in the way of these constellations going up anyways.
I won't necessarily cast a shadow on them (we do need infrastructure for communications, etc) but I can't help but to wonder..
..when and if something goes wrong, I am betting that is will be 99% on the public (i.e. taxpayer dollars) to fix. Not only ours, but globally.
It's a shame that cynicism has to be the order of the day, but I can't help but feeling we're heading into yet another situation wherein the profits are privatized and the losses will be socialized.
Because Kessler System is an absolute worst case situation requiring gross stupidity on all parts, including these constellation builders not actually worrying about their own best interests, and any one who brings it up is either ignorant, stupid, or spewing FUD for attention.Despite warnings of the various potential issues (including a rather catastrophic one in the Kessler Syndrome) it seems nothing is really getting in the way of these constellations going up anyways.
But if you don't over-model by a factor of five then you only get 20 tracks per image instead of 100.There's a real problem, but also, isn't 550000 sats a bit too high to model ?
We know People have Plans, but starting at 100k would have made the point while being actually achievable reasonably soon.
The gap between a handful of US and Chinese sustained constellations adding up to 100k, and actually having 500k sats, is really really a big one to cross.
If you go too big, you lose the urgency factor.
The telescopes should be launched to higher orbits. They're discussing asteroid spotting, and needing to observe the horizon at dawn to capture these asteroids in similar orbits to Earth. That means it's a bad design. They should be in high orbit, or somewhere like L1 inside of Earth's orbit, rather than one so obviously ill suited to their needs.I am curious about one thing - they state that the constellations should be launched to lower orbits. Is there a reason why the observatories can't be raised to higher orbits? This is a serious question - do the observatories need a specific period that only occur with a limited array of orbits?
Literally the enabling technology for deployment of megaconstellations is the solution to avoiding their impact for in-space observatories.The telescopes should be launched to higher orbits. They're discussing asteroid spotting, and needing to observe the horizon at dawn to capture these asteroids in similar orbits to Earth. That means it's a bad design. They should be in high orbit, or somewhere like L1 inside of Earth's orbit, rather than one so obviously ill suited to their needs.
"Oh, but it costs more to get there, and it costs more to communicate with there."
Cheaper launches are a thing, and they're getting cheaper continuously. Laser communications are a thing, and no longer require dedicated time on the DSN.
That chart seems intended to viscerally exaggerate the issue.I wish this image, or a description of it had been placed in the article. It shows the orbits of the various space telescopes mentioned and orbits of satellite constellations. This seems like a key point that isn't actually in the article.
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That's true, but why not have a physical shutter that blocks the light for the duration of the satellite's passage? With the "super black" processes available it should be possible to have a shutter that you can rotate into position without producing reflections that disrupt the image.A one second exposure does not collect near the amount of light/photons as 600s...kind of the whole point of a long exposure.
That is like asking the people in the post above that enjoy Yosemite to build their own park.Of course the astronomers' solution is for everyone to adapt to their needs. That's the m.o. of astronomers across the world. Heaven forbid they acknowledge the solution is to just go above all the satellites.
One has to realize that the cat is out of the bag. Even if all the civilian megaconstellations were cancelled tomorrow, the military applications are enough to demand their growth. Astronomers may as well adapt to reality and start planning to fly above the noise sources or adapt to them on the ground
Hell, you have the ephemeris information for every noise source before its in your image. If you're dead set on imaging through them then find a way to deal with the noise - physical blockers or selective amplification drops as noise sources go past.
I wonder about the two biggest contributors. Cinnamon-937 is from the Rwandan government, and at least as far as I can tell with a bit of searching, doesn't seem to exist as anything beyond an ITU filing. Semaphore-C apparently came from the same people, this time via France. It's not really clear that that actually exists as a serious effort either. Take those two out, and what's left is a lot lot smaller.I wish this image, or a description of it had been placed in the article. It shows the orbits of the various space telescopes mentioned and orbits of satellite constellations. This seems like a key point that isn't actually in the article.
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Yeah, I was thinking something similar the majority of those 550,000 sats appears to be from the constellations named Semaphore at 116,000 sats and Cinnamon-937 with 330,000. Haven't read the paper, but I hope that they also study the scenario in which those 2 huge constellations don't get made.There's a real problem, but also, isn't 550000 sats a bit too high to model ?
We know People have Plans, but starting at 100k would have made the point while being actually achievable reasonably soon.
The gap between a handful of US and Chinese sustained constellations adding up to 100k, and actually having 500k sats, is really really a big one to cross.
If you go too big, you lose the urgency factor.
The US and EU constellations provide internet access. The Chinese constellations provide Chinese network access. They're not duplication of capacity because they're not offering the same thing.Part of the problem is going to be an overcapacity issue. The most obvious is the duplication of capacity caused by the Chinese and US constellations. It's safe to assume each country isn't going to permit ground stations or terminals from the other.
While 600 1 second exposures wouldn't work, they could just close the shutter for the few seconds it takes for a satellite to pass their view and then resume the long exposure. It might not be ideal, but it should be simple enough since all the satellite tracks are known. So the interference can be predicted and consequent shutter closures can be programmed in advance.600 1 second exposures do actually capture (very nearly) the same amount of light as 1 600 second exposure. Unfortunately they also capture 600 times as much read noise (although that will add in quadrature so "only" sqrt(600) times as much). In the long term this is likely to become more common, but sensor read noise is going to have to improve before that is a good solution.
And the constellation that is most fully-realized, Starlink, is relatively low and getting lower with the Gen-2, Part-2 satellites. SpaceX obviously shouldn't have a monopoly, but maybe part of the answer is to force future constellations lower and future telescopes higher with a buffer zone in the middle.Yeah, I was thinking something similar the majority of those 550,000 sats appears to be from the constellations named Semaphore at 116,000 sats and Cinnamon-937 with 330,000. Haven't read the paper, but I hope that they also study the scenario in which those 2 huge constellations don't get made.
Each exposure is a single shot. I don't know the technical details of these future space scopes, but most use image stacking which removes the issues with satellite crossing as they get subtracted out. The real issue is for wide field telescopes that are used for tracking objects in space, as they use changes between each image to do their science, which satellites can't be subtracted from.And now a second comment where I admit to not knowing how digital photography works. With these long exposures shots is it operating just like a film camera or is it taking hundreds of readings per second and then adding them together as a sort of timelapse composite? So each pixel is the sum of light received at that pixels location of the duration of the shot from thousands of samples or like one long single reading on that one pixel?
There it is. The FUD. You've been around here long enough that ignorance is not an excuse, so it's either stupidity, or intentional disinformation. Your choice.Yes, yes, we'll just resign ourselves to losing satellites and astronauts that have to transition those higher orbits lacking 'workable solutions', including the very observatories that you argue should simply be placed above an innumerable horde semi-disposable communications satellites that absolutely must be made and operated as cheaply as possible because...
Thank you for not only quickly answering my question but anticipating my next one and answering it too.Each exposure is a single shot. I don't know the technical details of these future space scopes, but most use image stacking which removes the issues with satellite crossing as they get subtracted out. The real issue is for wide field telescopes that are used for tracking objects in space, as they use changes between each image to do their science, which satellites can't be subtracted from.