On Wed, 13 Jul 2022 16:05:45 -0700 (PDT), RichA <
[email protected]>
wrote:
On Wednesday, 13 July 2022 at 00:55:01 UTC-4, Chris L Peterson wrote:
On Tue, 12 Jul 2022 20:12:36 -0700 (PDT), RichA <[email protected]>
wrote:
It's great they have it up there, it should do some excellent science. But it also takes the spotlight away from a lot of ground-based optical astronomy and that spotlight needs to be on, owing to the impending destruction of the Earth-based night
sky by the thousands of satellites myriad companies plan to launch. They almost ALL use highly-reflective solar panels for power and that is what poses the greatest threat to ground-based imaging.
There is no significant threat to ground-based astronomy. If you
actually understood anything about astronomy, you would know that. A
handful of projects are going to have to deal with satellites. 99.9%
of astronomy will be unaffected.
Keep believing that when even a casual observers sees SEVERAL satellites per night going through their field of view...
Pretty much every casual observer I've ever met loves seeing
satellites. Go out and try to see something like a Starlink satellite.
It's hard. They're very dim. You'll only see them near sunrise or
sunset, and normally only for the first few days after they launch.
And satellites have no significant impact on imagers at all.
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