About This Author
Come closer.
|
Carrion Luggage #1096227 added August 31, 2025 at 10:53am Restrictions: None
Paint It Black
Technology to solve technology problems, from an article in Slate:
It's not just the world's most expensive telescopes, either. I've seen these damn things through personal telescopes (not mine; I don't own one).
A new type of super-black, highly resistant satellite paint promises an affordable fix to the satellite light pollution problem that has marred astronomical research since the recent advent of low-Earth-orbit megaconstellations.
"New" and "recent" may be exaggerations. Vantablack has been around for over 10 years, and Starlink for over five. Matter of perspective, I guess.
The constellation's thousands of spacecraft orbit so low that the sunlight they reflect outshines many stars from our perspective on Earth.
I could also take issue with their use of "spacecraft" for these small (but shiny) devices, but they are in space and someone crafted them, so, okay.
When the $1.9 billion Vera Rubin Observatory opens its telescopic eyes to the sky later this month...
They're open now. I did an entry on that observatory a while back: "Hey Rubin" 
...astronomers expect that up to 40% of its images will be degraded or completely ruined by satellite streaks.
That does seem like a lot.
But a new paint being developed in conjunction with astronomers might help. The paint, called Vantablack 310, could reduce the amount of light reflected by satellites in orbit down to just 2% of what is reflected by uncoated satellites...
Pretty sure the original Vantablack got licensed exclusively to artist Anish Kapoor. I guess the exclusivity doesn't apply to newer formulations.
According to Noelia Noël...
..whose parents should be arrested and imprisoned...
...an astrophysicist at the University of Surrey, these satellite streaks will significantly reduce the scientific return on investment that the taxpayer-funded Vera Rubin telescope represents.
I think it's mostly British taxpayers, which I guess doesn't much matter for this.
The partnership has now produced a new type of blacker-than-black space paint, which reflects less light than available alternatives and can be easily applied by satellite makers in their clean rooms.
That's cool and all, but I wonder about the dozens, or hundreds, of brightly reflective satellites up there already.
The new coating is based on a proprietary blend of carbon black, a soot-like form of carbon, mixed with special binders that make the paint resistant against the harsh conditions in near-Earth space.
Carbon: Is there anything it can't do?
There's more at the link, and let's just hope Kapoor doesn't get his hands on this stuff. |
© Copyright 2025 Robert Waltz (UN: cathartes02 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved. Robert Waltz has granted InkSpot.Com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.
|