Musk’s satellites ‘blocking’ view of the universe: researchers

RADIO waves from Elon Musk’s growing network of satellites are blocking scientists’ ability to peer into the universe, according to researchers in the Netherlands, BBC News reported.

The new generation of Starlink satellites, which provide fast internet around the world, are interfering more with radio telescopes than earlier versions, they say.

The thousands of orbiting satellites are “blinding” radio telescopes and may be hindering astronomical research, according to the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy (Astron).

SpaceX, which owns Starlink, has not replied to a request from BBC News for comment. According to a BBC report, the satellites provide broadband internet around the world, often to remote places, including challenging environments like Ukraine and Yemen.

Thousands of orbiting satellites ‘blinding’ radio telescopes, hindering astronomical research

They are also used to connect remote areas of the UK to fast internet. In 2022, tests showed that Starlink could deliver internet speeds four times faster than the average, according to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport. But astronomers say this comes at a cost.

 

 

“Every time more of these are launched with these kinds of emission levels, we see less and less of the sky,” Professor Jessica Dempsey, director of Astron, told BBC News.

‘We’re trying to look at things like the jets, which are emitted from black holes in the centre of galaxies. We also look at some of the earliest galaxies, millions and millions of light years away, as well as exoplanets,“ she said, highlighting the areas the satellite radiation is affecting.

Interference from the second generation, or V2, satellites was found by Astron to be 32 times stronger than the first generation.

The amount of radiation emitted exceeds regulations set by the industry body the International Telecommunications Union, Prof Dempsey added.

One estimate suggests there are 6,402 Starlink satellites currently in orbit at around 342 miles (550km) above Earth, making it the largest provider by far.

The satellites are relatively large — with 3m flat panels and an 8m solar array for power.

SpaceX’s main competitor, OneWeb, has fewer than 1,000. But it is a growing business area. Amazon is developing its own network and hopes to launch at least 3,000 in the next few years. By 2030 the number of satellites in orbit is expected to surpass 100,000.

 

 

The study was done using the LOFAR radio telescope in the Netherlands on a single day in July earlier this year. Many objects in space, including distant galaxies and planets, emit light on the electromagnetic spectrum.

This radiation travels like waves and radio telescopes can pick up on those waves, allowing us to get a picture of things we can’t see with our eyes. But those waves are being disturbed by satellites.

The scientists found unintended electromagnetic radiation from almost all the V2 Starlink satellites observed.

It was about 10m times brighter than from the weakest sources of light identified, they say.

Lead author Cees Bassa said it was like comparing the “faintest stars visible to the naked eye and the brightness of the full Moon”.

“Since SpaceX is launching about 40 second-generation Starlink satellites every week, this problem is becoming increasingly worse,” he added.

Robert Massey, Deputy Executive Director of the Royal Astronomical Society in the UK, said: “It’s very clear that if you have something this bright that is compromising a major radio observatory this much, then we need to do something and we need to do it quickly.