To me, they look exactly like all the other stars in the sky, except they move, a bit slower than a plane, and they don’t blink.
Comment on A million new SpaceX satellites will destroy the night sky — for everyone on Earth
Link@rentadrunk.org 23 hours agoFor the uneducated, what do these look like and can you see them in areas with light pollution?
yucandu@lemmy.world 19 hours ago
Cethin@lemmy.zip 22 hours ago
If you look towards the horizon with the sun, a little before sunrise or after sunset, you’ll probably be able to see flashes of them as they catch the light.
cecilkorik@piefed.ca 22 hours ago
Yes. They are technically reflected sunlight, so they are as bright as the sun, just very small. It makes sense you can see them during sunlight, since they are reflections of sunlight. You will typically only see them on the side of the sky opposite the sun, but the exact angle depends on the location and orientation of the satellite and the surface that is actually doing the reflection.
Generally speaking, they are dots that fade in somewhat gradually, moving at a consistent pace (typically slower than a shooting star, but faster than an airplane at cruising altitude) in a straight line direction for awhile at full brightness, then fading away.