supergeek 5 days ago

I find this passage quite amusing:

"Schöfbänker has also cross-haired with his equipment the "KH-11 Kennen" electro-optical satellites that were first introduced in 1976. "They are somewhat similar to the Hubble Space Telescope, but optimized to look down to Earth, instead of studying space," he said."

It's fairly well documented that the Hubble was effectively a US spy satellite pointing towards space, not the other way around. Or at least, it used all of the infrastructure in place to manufacture spy satellites.

Same maximum mirror size, same set of contractors/facilities, etc. It had a very different set of sensors, data systems, and focal range, but more or less demonstrated the US's spy satellite capabilities at the time.

  • mandevil 5 days ago

    The size being the same was not because of design reuse, but because that's the size limits imposed by the Space Shuttle payload bay. (1) Many of the contractors were the same, but that's because they won a competitive bidding process with a CCD design against a different set of contractors vidicon tube technology. Now, their experience with CCD's did come from the KH-11 process, but their bid did have competition.

    1: Speculation but reasonably informed: in 1970 when the USAF was asked to set the size of the payload bay (in exchange for USAF political support on a program that had just survived by one vote, their parameters became the design guidelines for the STS) they basically went with their latest design at the time, the KH-10 Manned Orbiting Laboratory, which had already been canceled but was the latest thing anyone had. If the people at NRO who provided the specs had known how the future was going to go, they would have probably wanted a shorter but wider payload bay, so you could put bigger main mirrors into space. But, and this is total speculation, in 1970 when they are committing to this the KH-11 is far enough in the future that they don't have a good understanding of what it should be like. The KH-11 was designed to be carried into space by the STS, but the STS was delayed so its first flights were on unmanned rockets, and then after Challenger the NRO tried to get all of their satellites off the STS and go fully unmanned. A couple of satellites were far enough along that they were committed to the Shuttle after Return to Flight, but no more were committed after that point.

  • red369 5 days ago

    I think also part of the KY-11 were the two telescopes the NRO (National Reconnaissance Office) donated to NASA in 2012. I forget the details I read, but as I remember they were roughly equivalent to Hubble, but obselete for the NRO.

  • Loughla 5 days ago

    So that was how long ago? I guess the super zoom satellite footage from movies might not be unrealistic like I thought. . .

    • sbierwagen 5 days ago

      There's a hard physical limit (the Rayleigh criterion) on the resolution of an optical system by how big the open end is. You won't get "super zoom" capabilities without a satellite the size of a stadium. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KH-11_KENNEN#Resolution_and_gr...

      • alganet 5 days ago

        What about multiple satellites working to get one image?

        Like the arrays we have on Earth pointing to space, but instead, arrays on space pointing to Earth.

        I know there probably isn't that many KH-style satellites to do it, but would it be possible?

        • GlenTheMachine 5 days ago

          The alignment has to be better than half a wavelength. That's doable for RF, but for optical telescopes you're talking nanometers. That's not possible (currently or in the foreseeable future) for a spacecraft constellation.

          • sbierwagen 5 days ago

            Amusingly enough, there's been some groundwork laid here by gravity wave interferometer constellations: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laser_Interferometer_Space_Ant...

            You could imagine a deep-infrared mission (longer wavelength, to soften the alignment requirements) launched into deep space (Jupiter+) where both the solar wind density is lower (reducing space weather perturbations) and reduced solar flux would reduce heat loads on the structure, (objects in Jupiter orbit get 3.6% as much light as in Earth orbits) making cooling easier. An interferometer design would also improve resolution. A not-widely advertised feature of the JWST is that, due to the same Rayleigh limits, its far infrared modes have dramatically lower resolution than its near infrared camera. A problem with a 6 meter mirror, less of a problem with a kilometer mirror.

      • wkat4242 4 days ago

        Cool to see Clifford Stoll mentioned there, he was also the one detecting one of the first international state-sponsored hacking attacks on the US and wrote a book about it, The Cuckoo's Egg.

    • coolspot 5 days ago

      In 2022 Trump declassified this satellite picture showing amazing resolution of current generation: https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2019/09/05/ap_1924315303447...

      • pests 5 days ago

        By declassified, you mean accidently tweeted a cell phone picture of the image printed out.

        Which is his right, just wanted to add context.

        • adastra22 5 days ago

          It wasn't on accident.

          • riedel 4 days ago

            Depends on what you call the accident. However, we will only know after November 5th.

            • pests 4 days ago

              No no, he is actually correct and I misspoke. He definitely tweeted on purpose (haha) but did he intend to declassify the image or just didn't realize?

              • adastra22 3 days ago

                Yes he quite possibly unintentionally revealed US spy satellite capabilities with an otherwise purposeful tweet. I say the not out of niceness to give him the benefit of the doubt, but because he's probably too stupid to understand the implications of what he was doing.

      • rafram 5 days ago

        That looks about as high-resolution as Google Maps to me. I’m sure the government can do much, much better, but this isn’t a good showcase.

        • defrost 5 days ago

          Apples to oranges comparison there.

          A great deal of Google Map imagery over urban areas is from relatively low level aerial survey aircraft that run lines over cities in summer.

          The resolution is better and stitched together often provides a better bang for the buck than satellite imagery.

          That said, Trump's image may have been from a sat or from a high altitude spy plane - they'd have ballpark optics but the aircraft would be closer in and more maneuverable .. I'd personally discount whatever Trump had to say about the source and want to hear from a third party military reconnaissance expert.

          • rafram 5 days ago

            Yeah, I’m referring to Google Maps satellite imagery, not the super-saturated and detailed urban area coverage. I mean, check out the satellite view here [1]. It’s not perfect, but you can make out building-sized objects and cars just as well as you can in the Trump image.

            [1]: https://maps.app.goo.gl/Fic93Bhf8X8CA5De6

slicktux 5 days ago

Anyone else getting a prompt on Safari when visiting the page asking them; “Do you want to download “sync”?”

And the only option on prompt being Download… Anyone??

  • thelastparadise 5 days ago

    Why don't you download/run it and tell us what it is.

    • slicktux 5 days ago

      I would…but don’t have time right now to go down a rabbit hole…I need sleep. :)

  • robinsonrc 5 days ago

    Not seeing it in Safari on iOS at least (although I may have missed it amongst the thousands upon thousands of adverts… I really should look into alternatives again)

    • slicktux 5 days ago

      I’m using iOS…I tried again visiting the site and I got the dialog prompt once again…

  • nielsbot 5 days ago

    Same here. Maybe something delivered from an ad?

adamredwoods 5 days ago

I would have read the article, but after a few nag-popups and ads, my laptop fan kicked on, so I closed it. Space.com is one of the few websites I care about that I would like to be a bit more browser-friendly.

  • binkHN 5 days ago

    Firefox's reading mode is a godsend.

  • interludead 4 days ago

    Nothing kills the reading mood faster than popups and a struggling laptop fan

  • 486sx33 5 days ago

    AdGuard on safari has zero pop ups or nags for me

  • reportgunner 4 days ago

    Somebody photographed a military satelite, not much to see.

  • TacticalCoder 5 days ago

    > ... but after a few nag-popups and ads, my laptop fan kicked on

    On my Linux I have 12 workspaces or so and my main browser is always on a specific workspace. Then I configured my system to always put the CPU in "powersave" mode when I'm switching to that workspace. Actually all my workspaces besides the one where I do dev are in powersave. Fixes the fan issue. Works for GPUs too (there are tools to configure the max TDP of a GPU: even if approximative, it works).

    I'm also blocking ads / millions of domains at the DNS (I'm running both unbound and dnsmasq).

    • binkHN 5 days ago

      How does powersave mode help here? All it does is slow everything down when you're in that workspace.

piombisallow 5 days ago

I wonder what the satellites think about Mr. Schöfbänker's tracking rig.

  • JKCalhoun 5 days ago

    They can see their reflection in the glass covering the scope's aperture.