2–4 Mar 2021
ESA/ESOC
Europe/Berlin timezone

The impact of satellites and space debris on Hubble Space Telescope observations

2 Mar 2021, 15:25
10m
ESA/ESOC

ESA/ESOC

Virtual Event
Presentation Day 1 - Measurements & Model Validation Talks - Day 1

Speaker

Kruk, Sandor (ESA/ESTEC)

Description

Being situated in low Earth orbit, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope is susceptible to higher orbit artificial satellites and space debris crossing its field of view. We use Google's AutoML Vision object detection algorithm based on deep learning and trained on volunteers' classifications from the Hubble Asteroid Hunter citizen science project (www.asteroidhunter.org) to identify asteroids and satellite trails in HST archival images taken in the past 20 years.

We measure, for the first time, the fraction of images impacted by artificial satellites for different instruments, filters and as a function of time. We show results from this project and discuss the prospects of using deep learning and citizen science to identify trail shapes in astronomical images. Many astronomers have recently raised concerns about the impact of future satellite constellations on ground-based observations. We argue that mega-constellations will also impact observations from low-Earth orbit, such as those with the Hubble Space Telescope.

Primary author

Kruk, Sandor (ESA/ESTEC)

Co-authors

Merín, Bruno (ESA) Mr Garcia Martin, Pablo (Universidad Autonoma Madrid) Dr Thomson, Ross (Google) Mr Karadag, Samet (Google) Mr Duran, Javier (ESAC)

Presentation materials