Look! Up in the sky! It’s a bird. It’s a plane. No, it’s a 60-foot mirror designed to reflect sunlight back to Earth after dark.
The US government has given a start-up the green light to build a 142kg satellite that will be launched about 650km above your head.
Eärendil-1, about the size of a fridge, would then unfurl a thin square mirror that bounces the sun’s ray to illuminate a three-mile-wide stretch of Earth.
Looking up, you would see a dot about as bright as the full moon, according to maker Reflect Orbital’s website.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which regulates tech, approved a license for a ‘single demonstration satellite’ on Thursday.
Reflect Orbital wants to send its first space mirror up this year, with the aim to launch 50,000 satellites by 2035.
Doing so would light up the night sky for several hours by 36,000 lux, how light is measured, which is comparable to daylight.
But the constellation of mirrors would illuminate the world below by 100 lux all the time, about as bright as the inside of a lift or corridor.
The idea behind the ‘solar reflector’ is that it could make ‘clean energy available on demand’ via the company’s app or website.
‘Turn it off instantly when you’re done,’ the website says, listing example uses such as lighting up an emergency scene, construction site or farm.
For a price, though. Reflect Orbital would charge about $5,000 an hour for the light of one mirror is a customer signed up for a year-long contract.
The company’s co-founder, Ben Nowack, said in March that shining one-time events or emergencies would be more costly.
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While solar farms – which can’t generate electricity in the dark – could split the profit from the power generated by the extra hours of light.
Yes, this idea is more or less identical to the James Bond movie Die Another Day, where the villain builds the Icarus satellite to help grow crops.
But US tech officials said the reflective film could help ‘advance American leadership in space’ and commercialise the Final Frontier.
When reviewing satellite applications, the FCC considers factors like if the satellite’s radio communications would interfere with aircraft or if the vessel will be safely disposed of.
Commission officials don’t consider environmental concerns – they’re Earthly woes, they argue, not applicable to space.
They added that despite objections from astronomers and wildlife experts that the probe isn’t in the ‘public interest’, it deserves a trial run.
‘To the contrary, it is in the public interest to make spectrum available to encourage companies to test new and innovative space activities, as it promotes American innovation and the new services and economic growth that come from that innovation,’ the order said.
The commission ended by denying a petition from the American Astronomical Society to block the light-on-demand project.
The society argued that the light from the mirrors will wreak havoc down below. Astronomers already have to deal with a sky increasingly cluttered with space junk and smudged by light pollution.
Dr James Blake, a research fellow at the University of Warwick’s Centre for Space Domain Awareness, agreed.
‘Any large object placed in low Earth orbit has the potential to contaminate valuable data for scientific research,’ he told Metro.
‘While innovation is to be encouraged, it’s paramount that we switch our thinking from what can be done in space, to what needs to be done in space.’
The European Southern Observatory estimated that each satellite in the cosmic mirror fleet would be four times brighter than the moon or Venus.
‘From a light-polluted city, like Munich, Germany, these hundreds of satellites would be the only “stars” visible in the night sky,’ it said.
Having a beam of light wash over the world could also mess up circadian rhythms – the ancient light-and-dark cycles that tell people to go to bed, birds to migrate and flowers to bloom, Charalambos Kyriacou, a geneticist at the University of Leicester, told Metro.
Kyriacou is the president of the European Biological Rhythms Society, one of four biological clock research groups that raised concerns to the FCC.
The societies even had to come up with a new name for this flying light source, ‘orbital light pollution’.
‘The FCC appears to have ignored our concerns, which is disappointing as this development has planetary implications,’ Kyriacou said.
‘I think that’s about all I can say – bit gobsmacked, to be honest.’
Nowack said: ‘We’re grateful to the FCC for recognising the importance of testing novel technologies in space.
‘This license is the first step toward rigorously testing our technology’s efficacy and the safeguards we have developed.’
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