论文标题
减轻LEO卫星的亮度和对Rubin天文台LSST的影响
Mitigation of LEO Satellite Brightness and Trail Effects on the Rubin Observatory LSST
论文作者
论文摘要
我们报告了有关亮度低轨道(LEO)卫星对Vera C. Rubin天文台及其对时空(LSST)的传统调查的减轻光学作用的研究。其中包括指向望远镜以避免卫星的选项,对鲁宾天文台LSST摄像机传感器上明亮步道的实验室调查,用于纠正由明亮步道引起的图像伪像的算法,对Darkening SpaceX Starlink Satellites进行的实验以及基于地面的随访。原始的Starlink V0.9卫星是G〜4.5 mag,最初的实验“ Darksat”为G〜6.1 mag。未来的Starlink黑暗计划可能会达到G〜7 Mag,这是一个亮度水平,可以使非线性图像伪像校正到远低于背景噪声。但是,卫星小径仍将以〜100的信噪比存在,从而产生可能影响数据分析并限制某些科学的系统错误。 For the Rubin Observatory 8.4-m mirror and a satellite at 550 km, the full width at half maximum of the trail is about 3" as the result of an out-of-focus effect, which helps avoid saturation by decreasing the peak surface brightness of the trail. For 48,000 LEOsats of apparent magnitude 4.5, about 1% of pixels in LSST nautical twilight images would need to be masked.
We report studies on the mitigation of optical effects of bright low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellites on Vera C. Rubin Observatory and its Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). These include options for pointing the telescope to avoid satellites, laboratory investigations of bright trails on the Rubin Observatory LSST camera sensors, algorithms for correcting image artifacts caused by bright trails, experiments on darkening SpaceX Starlink satellites, and ground-based follow-up observations. The original Starlink v0.9 satellites are g ~ 4.5 mag, and the initial experiment "DarkSat" is g ~ 6.1 mag. Future Starlink darkening plans may reach g ~ 7 mag, a brightness level that enables nonlinear image artifact correction to well below background noise. However, the satellite trails will still exist at a signal-to-noise ratio ~ 100, generating systematic errors that may impact data analysis and limit some science. For the Rubin Observatory 8.4-m mirror and a satellite at 550 km, the full width at half maximum of the trail is about 3" as the result of an out-of-focus effect, which helps avoid saturation by decreasing the peak surface brightness of the trail. For 48,000 LEOsats of apparent magnitude 4.5, about 1% of pixels in LSST nautical twilight images would need to be masked.