Back to Search Start Over

The GN-z11-Flash Event Can be a Satellite Glint

Authors :
Nir, Guy
Ofek, Eran O.
Gal-Yam, Avishay
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Recently Jiang et al. reported the discovery of a possible short duration transient, detected in a single image, spatially associated with a z~11 galaxy. Jiang et al. and Kahn et al. suggested the transient originates from a Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB), while Padmanabhan & Loeb argued the flash is consistent with a supernova shock breakout event of a 300 M_sun population III star. Jiang et al. argued against the possibility that this event originated from light reflected off a satellite. Here we show that reflection of sunlight from a high-orbit satellite or a piece of space debris is a valid and reasonable explanation. As shown in recent works, the rate of point-like satellite reflections, brighter than 11th magnitude, is >10 deg^{-2} day^-1 near the equatorial plane. At higher declinations the rate is 5--50 times lower, but still significant: about four orders of magnitudes higher than the rate estimated for GRBs.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2102.04466
Document Type :
Working Paper