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tylfin | 6 years ago

Do the satellites disrupt telescopes world wide? If that's the case it's pretty tough on observatories that were recently built, at (apparently) a tens of millions of dollar price tag, that are now impacted by the decision to launch without proper oversight.

Obviously having more accessible internet for the rest of the world is a positive.

Ref: https://www.space.com/8791-giant-telescope-50-million-fundin...

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DennisP|6 years ago

Not only internet, but Starlink funds Starship and gives it enough payload to start amortizing the rockets. With Starship launch prices at scale, astronomers can have all sorts of space telescopes at their disposal, and it won't cost much.

This isn't only because launch will be cheaper. Space hardware is expensive mostly because it has to be both durable and lightweight. If launch is cheap, it's fine for the hardware to be heavy, and if it breaks then it doesn't cost much to replace it.

Beyond astronomy, Starlink revenue and Starship are the keys to becoming a real space-faring society.

bathtub365|6 years ago

I really don't think it's a good thing for a company to cause problems for ground-based astronomy in the name of selling space-based astronomy.