Tag Archives: photobombing

Video captures the moon photobombing the sun

The moon carried out the ultimate photobomb this week when it moved in front of the sun and blocked the blazing surface with a dark silhouette as a satellite watched.

The sun-observing GOES satellite and its SUVI (Solar Ultraviolet Imager) instrument captured the cosmic show while observing the sun’s hot outer atmosphere, or corona. 

The photobomb was a solar eclipse that was only visible in space and lasted for several hours. 

The satellite observes solar emissions that act as warning signs of solar flares, which can cause blackouts on Earth, and captured a filament erupting at the northwestern limb near the pole once the moon disappeared.

‘Still, we might see isolated periods of geomagnetic storming at the G1 (minor) level due to the influence of high-speed solar wind from a coronal hole,’ EarthSky reports.

The moon moved in front of the sun, blocking the blazing surface with a dark silhouette during an eclipse only visible in space

The moon casted a silhouette between 10:30 to 12:00 UTC on November 23.

An image of the moon blocking part of the sun was shared on Twitter, where one user said, ‘the moon looks like it is taking a bite out of the sun.’ 

Observations of solar emissions aid in the early detection of solar flares, coronal mass ejections (CMEs), and other phenomena that impact the geospace environment.

The early warning given when SUVI observes a solar eruption comes at least 15 hours before the associated CME arrives at Earth. 

The sun-observing GOES satellite and its SUVI (Solar Ultraviolet Imager) instrument as observing the sun’s hot outer atmosphere or corona.

The moon seemed to come out of nowhere.  An image of the moon blocking part of the sun was shared on Twitter, where one user said, ‘the moon looks like it is taking a bite out of the sun’

CMEs are large expulsions of plasma and magnetic fields from the sun’s corona.

 They can eject billions of tons of coronal material and carry an embedded magnetic field (frozen in flux) stronger than the background solar wind interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) strength. 

While this eclipse was not seen on Earth, those in the US witnessed a stunning cosmic display of a reddish-hued moon hanging in the dark sky on November 8.

Known as a blood moon, it occurs when Earth’s shadow cloaks the moon and blocks the reflection of all direct sunlight – this causes the moon’s color to dim and turn a coppery red.

Peak totality – the eclipse stage where the moon is entirely in Earth’s shadow – occurred around 5:00 am ET.

The large, red moon was seen over New York City, Washington DC, Virginia and other parts of the US until it returned to its silvery color about two hours later.

The satellite observes solar emissions that act as warning signs of solar flares, which can cause blackouts on Earth, but the sun activity captured during the photobombing is deemed low

While this eclipse was not seen on Earth, those in the US witnessed a stunning cosmic display of a reddish-hued moon hanging in the dark sky on November 8

Tuesday’s event marks the second blood moon this year, following one in mid-May, and the next one is not expected until March 14, 2025. 

The eclipse was also visible across eastern Asia, Australia, the Pacific, South America and all of North America.

Skywatchers in Asia and Australia saw it with their evening moonrise. 

At the same time, the spectacle played out for observers in other parts of North America in the early morning hours before the moon set.

And it was visible to the naked eye wherever skies were clear in those regions.

The entire eclipse unfolded over nearly six hours as the moon gradually edged into the Earth’s paler outer shadow, its ‘penumbra,’ then entered the Earth’s darker inner shadow, or ‘umbra,’ before reaching totality and eventually emerging from the other side.

NASA said the moon was 242,740 miles from Earth during this lunar event that lasted about 90 minutes.

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SpaceX’s starlink satellites are photobombing astronomy images, study says

As the armada of satellites circling Earth grows, a new study shows that astronomy images are being marred by streaks of reflected sunlight left by the fast-moving objects.

SpaceX alone launched nearly 150 of its expanding fleet of Starlink telecommunications satellites in the past month.

For the study, published Jan. 14 in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, researchers examined the effects of Starlink satellites on about 300,000 images taken by an instrument at the Palomar Observatory in Southern California. Between November 2019 and September 2021, they noted a 35-fold increase in the number of corrupted images.

The streaks may not be enough to compromise the images’ scientific value, the study authors said. But they could complicate efforts to detect potentially hazardous asteroids, said Eric Bellm, a University of Washington astronomer who wasn’t involved in the research.

“There definitely is sort of a planetary defense aspect here,” he said.

In this photo provided by NASA, from left to right, European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Pesquet, NASA astronauts Megan McArthur and Shane Kimbrough and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency astronaut Akihiko Hoshide gesture inside the SpaceX Dragon s (Aubrey Gemignani/NASA via AP / AP Newsroom)

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Satellites “have the potential to interfere with ground-based observations by increasing the complexity of differentiating artificial satellites from natural objects like asteroids and comets,” a NASA spokesman said. NASA searches for near-Earth objects such as asteroids by looking for points of light in the night sky that move with respect to stars.

Though mostly invisible to the naked eye, the satellites can also hamper amateur and professional astronomers’ observations, said astronomer Connie Walker, who wasn’t involved in the new study. She co-directs an effort by the International Astronomical Union, a nongovernmental organization, to ease impacts of so-called satellite constellations on astronomy observations.

Astronomers have been discussing the potential impacts of satellite constellations — groups of similar satellites working together in orbit — for years, said Stanford University astrophysicist Bruce Macintosh, who wasn’t involved in the new research. But the discussions have focused mostly on computer models or a limited number of corrupted images, he said.

“This paper helps anchor the models to real data and provides statistics rather than one-off images,” he said.

The study focused on Starlink satellites because they are now the largest satellite constellation in low orbit, said Przemek Mróz, a University of Warsaw astronomer and the study’s lead author. Other companies, including Amazon.com Inc. and London-based OneWeb, are developing satellite constellations.

Amazon has taken steps to reduce its satellites’ impacts on astronomical observations and is working with astronomers to better understand their concerns, a company spokesman said.

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A OneWeb spokeswoman said the company was committed to reducing its satellites’ effects on observations. “We publicly provide data on where our satellites are at any given time, helping astronomers to adjust their observations and avoid any disruption,” she said.

Space Exploration Technologies Corp., the formal name for SpaceX, didn’t respond to requests for comment. “We firmly believe in the importance of a natural night sky for all of us to enjoy,” the company said in 2020, adding that it was working to understand how to curb potential problems caused by its Starlink satellites.

The potential problems posed by satellite constellations may worsen with the deployment of more satellites, according to astronomers. 

“Astronomy is facing a tipping-point situation of increasing interference with observations and loss of science,” Dr. Walker said.

The Federal Communications Commission has authorized 12,000 Starlink satellites as part of a plan to extend broadband internet service to the entire planet, including remote areas. Commission filings indicate that SpaceX wants to increase the number to at least 42,000. About 1,740 Starlink satellites are active or moving to operational orbits, SpaceX Chief Executive Elon Musk tweeted on Jan. 15.

OneWeb has launched 394 satellites of its planned 648-satellite constellation. Amazon aims to put more than 3,000 satellites in orbit by 2029 as part of Project Kuiper, a plan to provide world-wide high-speed internet access. China last year said it planned to launch a network of 13,000 telecommunications satellites.

The impact that satellites have on images depends in part on the length of time astronomers use an instrument to observe a celestial object.

SpaceX Chief Engineer Elon Musk speaks in front of Crew Dragon at SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, Calif., Oct. 10, 2019.  (Yichuan Cao/NurPhoto via Getty Images I Background photo: SpaceX / Getty Images)

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Streaks seen in images captured by the Palomar instrument, which typically makes 30-second observations, don’t mean that the image is ruined, said Tom Prince, a California Institute of Technology physicist and a co-author of the new study. But, he added, “that may not be true for other observatories.”

Astronomers using the W.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii often peer at faint celestial objects for extended periods — sometimes for hours. If a satellite streaks through an extended exposure, the “data could be irrevocably damaged,” said John O’Meara, the observatory’s chief scientist.

Software can help remove satellite streaks, Dr. Bellm said, but may further corrupt image data.

Satellites also pose a challenge for radio astronomy, in which images are created with radio waves rather than light.

The signals that telecommunications satellites beam down to Earth at times have drowned out radio signals from celestial objects, said Philip Diamond, director general of the Square Kilometer Array, a radio telescope project that began construction last year. “Signals from satellites can be millions of times stronger than the brightest radio sources in the sky,” he said.

Dr. Prince said SpaceX had “acted responsibly” by moving to mitigate potential problems caused by Starlink. The company began launching satellites equipped with visors that shield their more reflective parts in mid-2020. The new study showed that Starlink satellites with visors dropped in brightness by a factor of about five.

Amazon plans to launch a prototype satellite equipped with a sunshade by year’s end.

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Dr. Macintosh called for more regulations and international agreements to limit the impact of satellites on astronomy.

SpaceX and other companies that provide satellite-enabled internet in the U.S. must obtain a license from the FCC. The agency’s rules cover possible interference to radio astronomy but don’t extend to reflected light from satellites, an FCC spokesman said.

Dr. Macintosh said he thought that “with care and cooperation and some regulation,” the potential problems posed by satellite constellations could be overcome even as more satellites go up.

“The genie isn’t going back in the bottle,” he said.

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