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  • [♪ INTRO]

  • From an orbiting disco ball to a new NASA mission, there's been lots of satellite

  • news in the past week, some of it controversial, and some less so.

  • First, the commercial spaceflight startup Rocket Lab

  • had their second test launch last week, and it went really well.

  • They launched their rocket, adorably called Still Testing, from New Zealand,

  • and it got all four of its satellites into orbit.

  • Three were for industry or science, and one of them was just for fun.

  • Well, fun for Rocket Lab, at least.

  • A lot of astronomers are pretty upset, because that fourth satellite is basically a disco ball.

  • It's called the Humanity Star,

  • and it's a geodesic sphere about a meter across with 65 highly reflective sides.

  • It was designed to reflect sunlight back to Earth, and to be a flashing beacon brighter

  • than any star we can see, apart from the Sun, of course.

  • It'll only last about nine months, after which it'll fall back to Earth and should

  • burn up in the atmosphere.

  • The idea behind it is to encourage people to think about their lives

  • and humanity's place in the universe.

  • Which is neat, but some astronomers have argued

  • that maybe this is really just a hunk of shiny space garbage.

  • After all, you could get that shared human experience by looking at the stars already

  • there, or the moon, which is a satellite that reflects the sun.

  • And more importantly, the Humanity Star will probably get in the way of scientific observations.

  • See, there are already tons of satellites in space, and they frequently show up as long,

  • white streaks through astronomers' images.

  • But at least those satellites are typically useful, like for GPS or research.

  • The Humanity Star, on the other hand, exists only to be seen.

  • And it's supposedly going to be a lot brighter than other satellites.

  • Part of the engineering inspiration behind the Star is the Iridium flare phenomenon,

  • an unintentional byproduct of having satellites in space.

  • Iridium is a telecommunications company with a network of

  • very reflective satellites around Earth.

  • When one of these satellites catches sunlight, the resulting flare is ridiculously bright,

  • like, brighter than most things in the sky.

  • Iridium flares interfere with astronomical observations and, unfortunately, they're

  • pretty common, but at least they're brief.

  • But Rocket Lab took this one step further and built something that, in the eyes of some

  • scientists, is designed to be as bright and inconvenient as Iridium flares all the time.

  • So the Humanity Star is all fun and games, until it interferes with science.

  • But no matter how people feel about it, one thing's for sure: Its parent company Rocket

  • Lab is doing some cool work.

  • Someday, the company hopes to make 50 to 120 trips to space each year to launch satellites,

  • more than any other organization.

  • And, maybe thankfully, most of those satellites will be practical.

  • Meanwhile, last Thursday, NASA put a new satellite into orbit that's definitely useful!

  • It's called GOLD, or Global-scale Observations of the Limb and Disk, and it's expected

  • to start doing science in mid-October.

  • Along with its partner satellite ICON, which should launch later this year,

  • GOLD will study Earth's upper atmosphere, specifically,

  • where the thermosphere and the ionosphere overlap.

  • The thermosphere is a layer of our atmosphere that absorbs lots of heat from the Sun,

  • keeping us comfy and not frozen to death.

  • It's technically considered space, and it's where the International Space Station lives.

  • It's made mainly of uncharged particles, and stretches from around 90 kilometers above

  • the Earth up to 1000 kilometers.

  • Meanwhile, the ionosphere is the region of the atmosphere where radiation from the Sun

  • has knocked electrons off lots of atoms.

  • So it's full of charged particles, or ions.

  • And depending on the Sun's conditions,

  • it can stretch anywhere from 50 to 1000 kilometers above the Earth.

  • The area where the thermosphere and ionosphere overlap is really dynamic, because it's

  • where two kinds of gas interact.

  • So there's all kinds of stuff going on there.

  • The thing is, we don't know much about those interactions.

  • Until now, they've been really hard to study, because satellites in the thermosphere tend

  • to deorbit relatively quickly.

  • In general, we at least know that both space weather and Earth weather influence that region,

  • so that will guide GOLD's observations.

  • During the day, GOLD will look at how the Sun affects this overlapping area, and how

  • Earth's weather affects the thermosphere's temperature and dynamics.

  • Then, at night, GOLD will look at the ionosphere.

  • As this region moves around, unpredictable, dense pockets of ions can develop, and they

  • can partially or completely disrupt radio transmissions to and from space.

  • Which is not great, because that's how we communicate with the ISS and get GPS signals.

  • So GOLD will study those pockets to help us better understand the interference,

  • and maybe eventually compensate for it.

  • Data from the satellite will also be used to calibrate models of the upper atmosphere.

  • Since this area has been so hard to study directly, a lot of our understanding of what's

  • going on up there has come from models.

  • Lots of them are based directly on physical principles, but without data to confirm, we

  • don't really know how well they're working.

  • Using models and direct observations will allow us to do lots more research and better

  • understand this environment.

  • And it's really important to figure out what's going on there,

  • because that's where astronauts live!

  • And, for better or worse, where the Humanity Star now lives.

  • And we want to keep these people and satellites safe!

  • Well, definitely the people, and at least most of the satellites.

  • It depends on who you ask.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space!

  • If you'd like to keep learning about the universe with us, or if you want to write

  • a disco song about space, let us know in the comments below,

  • and go to youtube.com/scishowspace and subscribe.

  • [♪ OUTRO]

[♪ INTRO]

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