Astronomers working with SA’s SKA telescope are pushing authorities to ensure any licensing agreement with Elon Musk’s Starlink will protect their groundbreaking observations, a senior scientist said.
Discussions to bring Musk’s internet service Starlink to SA have already been contentious, with parent company SpaceX criticising local shareholding laws while backing equity equivalent programmes.
Attaching astronomy-linked licensing conditions may further complicate attempts to introduce Starlink to the country of Musk’s birth, where he has already said he is deterred by government black empowerment policies.
SA said it would review its information and communication technology sector rules but would not back down on government policies to transform the economy three decades after white-minority rule ended.
Scientists fear SA’s Square Kilometre Array (SKA-Mid), the world’s most powerful radio telescope, together with another array co-hosted in Australia, will have their sensitive space observations distorted by Starlink’s low-orbiting satellites.
“It will be like shining a spotlight into someone’s eyes, blinding us to the faint radio signals from celestial bodies,” Federico Di Vruno, co-chair of International Astronomical Union Centre for the Protection of the Dark and Quiet Sky, told Reuters in a phone interview.
Di Vruno said the SKA Observatory, where he is spectrum manager, and the SA Radio Astronomy Observatory (Sarao) were lobbying for licence requirements to reduce the impact on observations in certain frequency ranges, including some that SKA-Mid uses.
That could direct Starlink to steer satellite beams away from SKA receivers or stop transmission for a few seconds to minimise interference, he said.
SA’s current SKA antennae, in the remote Northern Cape town of Carnarvon, use the 350 megahertz to 15.4 gigahertz bandwidth, a range also used by most satellite operators for downlinks.
The Independent Communications Authority of SA (Icasa) regulator and Starlink did not immediately respond to questions from Reuters about the scientists’ concerns.
SA’s MeerKAT radio telescope, a precursor to SKA-Mid which will be incorporated into the larger instrument, has already discovered a rare giant radio galaxy that is 32 times the size of the Milky Way.
Last year, it found 49 new galaxies in under three hours, according to Sarao. SKA Observatory, an international body, also campaigns for conditions on licensing agreements with other major satellite operators such as Amazon and Eutelsat’s OneWeb to ensure quiet skies amid a boom in new satellite launches.
“We are trying to follow different technical and regulatory avenues to mitigate this issue on the global stage,” Di Vruno said.
Reuters





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