-
Snowstorm blankets US northeast as New York sees travel ban
-
Healthcare crisis looms over Greenland's isolated villages
-
Hodgkinson says breaking 800m record would put her among athletics' greatest
-
Two Russian security personnel were on board France-seized tanker: sources
-
EU puts US trade deal on ice after Supreme Court ruling
-
Hetmyer blasts 85 as West Indies pile up 254-6 against Zimbabwe
-
Canada PM heads to Asia seeking new trade partners as US ties fray
-
South Africa accepts Trump's new US ambassador
-
Iraq's Maliki defends PM candidacy, seeks to reassure US
-
UEFA suspend Benfica's Prestianni after alleged racist abuse
-
Jetten sworn in as youngest-ever Dutch PM
-
Italy's Enel to invest 20bn euros in renewables by 2028
-
BBC apologises for 'involuntary' Tourette's racial slur during BAFTA awards
-
Kristen Bell returns to host glitzy Actor Awards in Hollywood
-
Iran says would respond 'ferociously' to any US attack
-
Venezuelan foreign minister demands 'immediate release' of Maduro
-
Dane Vingegaard to start season at Paris-Nice in March
-
Australia PM backs removing UK's Andrew from line of succession
-
Where do Ukraine and Russia stand after four years of war?
-
Police investigating racist abuse of Premier League quartet
-
Fiji to start Nations Championship at 'home' to Wales in Cardiff
-
EU lawmakers to put US trade deal on hold after Supreme Court ruling
-
Rubio to attend Caribbean summit as US presses Venezuela, Cuba
-
'Ugly' England aim to spin their way to T20 World Cup semi-finals
-
Nigeria paid Boko Haram ransom for kidnapped pupils: intel sources
-
Tudor says Tottenham can still beat the drop despite Arsenal loss
-
Violence sweeps Mexico after most-wanted drug cartel leader killed
-
France giant Meafou capable of being 'world's best' lock
-
Stocks diverge, dollar down over Trump tariffs uncertainty
-
World champions South Africa announce eight home Tests for 2026/27
-
Liverpool boss Slot encouraged by Mac Allister's return to form
-
India replaces British architect statue with independence hero
-
Pakistan warn England's flaky batting to expect a trial by spin
-
Philippines' Duterte authorised murders, ICC told as hearings open
-
Iran says would respond 'ferociously' to any US attack, even limited strikes
-
New Dutch government sworn in under centrist Jetten
-
What the future holds for the CJNG cartel after leader killed
-
ICC kicks off pre-trial hearing over Philippines' Duterte
-
UN chief decries global rise of 'rule of force'
-
Nemesio Oseguera, the brutal Mexican drug lord known as 'El Mencho'
-
Senegal's Sahad, radiant champion of 'musical pan-Africanism'
-
New York orders citywide travel ban as major storm hits US
-
'Considered a traitor': Life of an anti-war Ukrainian in Russia
-
South Korea and Brazil sign deals on K-beauty, trade
-
Zimbabwe farmers seek US help over long-promised payouts
-
Hong Kong appeals court upholds jailing of 12 democracy campaigners
-
India battle for World Cup survival after 'messing up on grand scale'
-
'I will go': Bengalis in Pakistan hope for family reunions
-
North Korea touts nuclear advances as Kim re-chosen to lead ruling party
-
South Korea protests 'Victory' banner hung from Russian embassy
Satellite surge threatens space telescopes, astronomers warn
Light from the half a million satellites that humanity is planning to launch into Earth's orbit in the coming years could contaminate almost all the images taken by space telescopes, NASA astronomers warned Wednesday.
Scientists have already been sounding the alarm about how light pollution from increasingly massive satellites threaten the future of dark skies seen from the ground.
Now, a study published in the journal Nature is the first to estimate how the immense number of satellites planned for the future could stray into the view of nearby telescopes attempting to probe the universe.
Since 2019, the number of satellites in low-Earth orbit has skyrocketed from roughly 2,000 to 15,000, according to the study -- many of them part of billionaire Elon Musk's Starlink internet constellation.
But that is a drop in the bucket compared to what is coming.
If all of the plans currently filed to regulators launch into space, there will be 560,000 satellites orbiting Earth by the end of the 2030s, the study said.
This poses "a very severe threat" to space telescopes, the study's lead author, Alejandro Borlaff of the NASA Ames Research Center in California, told AFP.
For the research, the astronomers simulated how the 560,000 satellites would impact four space telescopes.
Reflected light from the satellites would affect 96 percent of all images taken by NASA's SPHEREx telescope, the European Space Agency's planned ARRAKIHS telescope and China's planned Xuntian telescope, the study found.
The Hubble Space Telescope, which is less likely to snap a satellite as it takes in a narrower view of the universe, would have a third of its images tainted.
This could have an impact on all sorts of scientific endeavours.
"Imagine that you are trying to find asteroids that may be potentially harmful for Earth," Borlaff said.
An asteroid streaking through the sky "looks exactly like a satellite... it's really hard to figure out which one is the bad one," he added.
Some space telescopes, such as the famous James Webb, are unaffected because they are hovering at a stable spot 1.5 million kilometres (932,000 miles) from Earth called the second Lagrange point.
- 'As bright as the brightest star' -
One solution could be to deploy satellites at lower altitudes than space telescopes -- but that could potentially deplete Earth's ozone layer, the study said.
The most straightforward solution may just be to launch fewer satellites.
But competition from rival satellite internet companies -- and the surging needs of the artificial intelligence boom -- make that unlikely.
Nearly three-quarters of the satellites currently in orbit are part of Musk's Starlink network, Borlaff said.
But Starlink is expected to represent just 10 percent of all satellites in a couple of decades as competition blasts off, according to the study.
For now, companies could help by providing the location, orientation and colour of their satellites to those operating space telescopes, Borlaff said.
Another problem is that satellites are getting much bigger.
To the naked eye, satellites that are 100 square metres (more than 1,000 square feet) in size are "as bright as the brightest star that you can see in the sky", Borlaff said.
However, to handle AI's data requirements, there are now plans to build ones 3,000 square metres wide.
These giants could be "as bright as a planet", Borlaff added.
W.AbuLaban--SF-PST