FROTH AND BUBBLE
Study confirms dark coating can reduce satellite reflectivity
by Staff Writers
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Dec 09, 2020

illustration only

Observations conducted by the Murikabushi Telescope of Ishigakijima Astronomical Observatory confirmed that dark coating can reduce satellite reflectivity by half. There are concerns that numerous artificial satellites in orbit could impair astronomical observations, but these findings may help alleviate such conditions.

Today's growing demand for space-based services has spawned a wave of satellite constellation projects which operate numerous artificial satellites in orbit. Since these satellites can shine by reflecting sunlight, the astronomy community has raised concerns about their potential impact on astronomical observations.

In January 2020, SpaceX launched "DarkSat," an experimental satellite with an anti-reflective coating, and asked astronomers to assess how much this coating can reduce the satellite reflectivity. Brightness measurements of artificial satellites have already been conducted, but until now, there was no verification that a dark coating actually achieves the expected reflectivity reduction.

The Murikabushi Telescope of Ishigakijima Astronomical Observatory can observe celestial objects simultaneously in three different wavelengths (colors). Comparing multicolor data obtained under the same conditions provides more accurate insight into how much the coating can reduce the satellite brightness.

Observations conducted from April to June 2020 revealed for the first time in the world that artificial satellites, whether coated or not, are more visible at longer wavelengths, and that the black coating can halve the level of surface reflectivity of satellites. Such surface treatment is expected to reduce the negative impacts on astronomical observations. Further measures will continue to be implemented to pave the way for peaceful coexistence between space industries and astronomy.

Research paper


Related Links
National Institutes Of Natural Sciences
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up

FROTH AND BUBBLE
UK pollution inquest family would have moved if health risks were known
London (AFP) Dec 7, 2020
The mother of a young London girl who died after a series of severe asthma attacks said on Monday she would have moved if she had been aware of the dangers of air pollution. Rosamund Adoo-Kissi-Debrah, who lost her daughter Ella in 2013, said "moving would have been the first thing" to do if she had known the danger it posed to the nine-year-old. A coroner's inquest is investigating whether high levels of pollution near the family's home by a busy and regularly congested road contributed to the ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Most Advanced SBIRS Missile Warning Satellite Ready For 2021 Launch

Russian military successfully tests new anti-ballistic missile

Navy intercepts, destroys ICBM during missile test in Hawaii

U.S., allied countries begin NATO Missile Firing Installation 2020 in Greece

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Projectile concept shows potential to extend munition range to more than 100km

U.S., Australia agree to partner on hypersonic missile development

Tigray forces fire rockets at Ethiopian regional capital

UK ex-defence worker jailed for sharing missile info

FROTH AND BUBBLE
UAV Navigation and CATEC looking for the Global Unmanned Mobility Solution

France seeks drones to detect, intercept battlefield radio communications

NATO receives final Alliance Ground Surveillance aircraft in Italy

Citadel Defense accelerates response times against UAV threats with AI

FROTH AND BUBBLE
NATO announces readiness of new special operations command

Northrop Grumman Joint Threat Emitter deployed in support of UK-Led Joint Warrior Exercise

Elbit Systems launches E-LynX-Sat - a portable tactical SATCOM system

NXTCOMM Defense Division formed to support military communications imperative

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Eyeing China, top US general sees tech revolution on battlefield

U.S. Marines conclude cold-weather exercise in Norway

Air Force opens five-day virtual meeting to accelerate innovation

BAE Systems wins $3.2B contract for British munitions

FROTH AND BUBBLE
US, China dominated arms market in 2019: report

Germany's Rheinmetall to build bombs for French, German air forces

Oshkosh nabs $911M for JLTVs for U.S., Lithuania, Brazil, Macedonia

Trump threatens military spending veto in social media bias battle

FROTH AND BUBBLE
2021 defense funding bill blocks troop drawdowns in Germany, Afghanistan, Iraq

Biden picks General LLoyd Austin as first Black Pentagon chief

US, China extend giant panda deal by three years

China's Xi sends condolences over death of former French president

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Making 3D nanosuperconductors with DNA

Researchers share design for affordable single-molecule microscope

Scientists explain the paradox of quantum forces in nanodevices

Rice rolls out next-gen nanocars