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Multicolor and multi-spot observations of Starlink's Visorsat

Authors :
Horiuchi, Takashi
Hanayama, Hidekazu
Ohishi, Masatoshi
Nakaoka, Tatsuya
Imazawa, Ryo
Kawabata, Koji S.
Takahashi, Jun
Onozato, Hiroki
Saito, Tomoki
Yamanaka, Masayuki
Nogami, Daisaku
Tampo, Yusuke
Kojiguchi, Naoto
Ito, Jumpei
Shibata, Masaaki
Schramm, Malte
Oasa, Yumiko
Kanai, Takahiro
Oide, Kohei
Murata, Katsuhiro L.
Hosokawa, Ryohei
Takamatsu, Yutaka
Imai, Yuri
Ito, Naohiro
Niwano, Masafumi
Takagi, Seiko
Ono, Tatsuharu
Kouprianov, Vladimir V.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

This study provides the results of simultaneous multicolor observations for the first Visorsat (STARLINK-1436) and the ordinary Starlink satellite, STARLINK-1113 in the $U$, $B$, $V$, $g'$, $r$, $i$, $R_{\rm C}$, $I_{\rm C}$, $z$, $J$, $H$, and $K_s$ bands to quantitatively investigate the extent to which Visorsat reduces its reflected light. Our results are as follows: (1) in most cases, Virorsat is fainter than STARLINK-1113, and the sunshade on Visorsat, therefore, contributes to the reduction of the reflected sunlight; (2) the magnitude at 550 km altitude (normalized magnitude) of both satellites often reaches the naked-eye limiting magnitude ($<$ 6.0); (3) from a blackbody radiation model of the reflected flux, the peak of the reflected components of both satellites is around the $z$ band; and (4) the albedo of the near infrared range is larger than that of the optical range. Under the assumption that Visorsat and STARLINK-1113 have the same reflectivity, we estimate the covering factor, $C_{\rm f}$, of the sunshade on Visorsat, using the blackbody radiation model: the covering factor ranges from $0.18 \leq C_{\rm f} \leq 0.92$. From the multivariable analysis of the solar phase angle (Sun-target-observer), the normalized magnitude, and the covering factor, the phase angle versus covering factor distribution presents a moderate anti-correlation between them, suggesting that the magnitudes of Visorsat depend not only on the phase angle but also on the orientation of the sunshade along our line of sight. However, the impact on astronomical observations from Visorsat-designed satellites remains serious. Thus, new countermeasures are necessary for the Starlink satellites to further reduce reflected sunlight.<br />Comment: 31 pages, 9 figures, published in PASJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2304.05191
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/pasj/psad021