The high optical brightness of the BlueWalker 3 satellite

Nandakumar, Sangeetha; Eggl, Siegfried; Tregloan-Reed, Jeremy; Adam, Christian; Anderson-Baldwin, Jasmine; Bannister, Michele T.; Battle, Adam; Benkhaldoun, Zouhair; Campbell, Tanner; Colque, J. P.; Damke, Guillermo; Plauchu Frayn, Ilse; Ghachoui, Mourad; Guillen, Pedro F.; Kaeouach, Aziz Ettahar; et. al.

Abstract

Large constellations of bright artificial satellites in low Earth orbit pose significant challenges to ground-based astronomy1. Current orbiting constellation satellites have brightnesses between apparent magnitudes 4 and 6, whereas in the near-infrared Ks band, they can reach magnitude 2 (ref. 2). Satellite operators, astronomers and other users of the night sky are working on brightness mitigation strategies3,4. Radio emissions induce further potential risk to ground-based radio telescopes that also need to be evaluated. Here we report the outcome of an international optical observation campaign of a prototype constellation satellite, AST SpaceMobile's BlueWalker 3. BlueWalker 3 features a 64.3 m2 phased-array antenna as well as a launch vehicle adaptor (LVA)5. The peak brightness of the satellite reached an apparent magnitude of 0.4. This made the new satellite one of the brightest objects in the night sky. Additionally, the LVA reached an apparent V-band magnitude of 5.5, four times brighter than the current International Astronomical Union recommendation of magnitude 7 (refs. 3,6); it jettisoned on 10 November 2022 (Universal Time), and its orbital ephemeris was not publicly released until 4 days later. The expected build-out of constellations with hundreds of thousands of new bright objects1 will make active satellite tracking and avoidance strategies a necessity for ground-based telescopes.

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Título según WOS: ID WOS:001106758000001 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: NATURE
Volumen: 623
Número: 7989
Editorial: Nature Publishing Group
Fecha de publicación: 2023
Página de inicio: 938
Página final: +
DOI:

10.1038/s41586-023-06672-7

Notas: ISI