ben_w 1 day ago

They seem to be talking about each satellite managing the luminosity of the full moon over a few square kilometres, and getting a few tens of thousands of them.

Even if you ignoring how much drag these must have, and hence how much electrical power you'd need for an ion drive just to keep them up, each spot being a few km across (and only getting light while the satellite is over your horizon) is just not compelling.

Given most people don't have any reason to illuminate several square kilometres at once, for realistic scenarios it will take a lot of satellites before you beat the cheap battery-powered floodlights in my local Aldi or Kaufland, and the batteries in those lasts a lot longer than the 10-15 or so minutes each of the satellites will be over the horizon, and reflectors like these can only supply sunlight close to sunset otherwise the earth blocks the sun from them.

In the list of things which, if you could make them at all useful, would also be relatively easy to redesign as weapons.

  • b112 1 day ago

    With global warming, trillions upon trillions of acres of immensely fertile bogland, in Northern Canada is thawing. The problem is, global warming doesn't affect daylight. 4 hours of "the sun barely makes it over the horizon" means no crops, no matter if the temp is above 0C in September.

    Obviously this satellite isn't viable, but all things start small. Large tracts of land could be illuminated.

    But of course, I question the logic of redirecting more sunlight, especially such large amounts, onto a world already warming uncontrollably.

    Still, it could be useful for the polar caps on Mars?

    These seem like unlikely things though.

    • ben_w 1 day ago

      Mars… needs something rather bigger. I don't know what the most cost-effective solution would be, but Mars gets about half the per-area sunlight as Earth so it would need a reflector about the size of Mars to get the same overall insolation.

      My guess is it's probably easier to make a bunch of greenhouses on the surface? But the scale is so huge that which is best will be affected by technology invented after you start.

    • bunderbunder 1 day ago

      Though I have to ask the value of illuminating large tracts of mostly uninhabited land. Lighting areas where no humans are around to want the light seems like a proposition that’s mostly useful for further disturbing nocturnal wildlife.

      What might be more useful is to illuminate just the areas where a human currently needs to see well. It would hypothetically be both more useful - you can concentrate more light in just the areas you need it - and less expensive.

      What would be particularly cool about this hypothetical technology is that it could work equally well under foliage and indoors.

    • Cthulhu_ 1 day ago

      If sattelites can reflect enough light to make an impact on e.g. global warming, they can also reflect enough to circumvent it. Point them back at the sun or into space and in theory it redirects the same amount of energy away from the earth as it would pointing towards it.

      That said, I'm (armchair) confident it'll be good for moonlight-level illumination on a local area at best. They'll need to scale up to thousands / tens of thousands to make any measurable impact - which is their objective by the looks of it, but it'll take a while yet. If this one creates enough backlash, a fleet won't make it. Assuming they get the money and customers to justify a fleet in the first place.

      • danaris 1 day ago

        For those purposes, why would it need to be mirrors? We don't care to coherently reflect the light; we just want to block it.

        (For reference, I think all of these are likely to be somewhere between moderately and incredibly bad ideas...)

        • wolrah 23 hours ago

          > We don't care to coherently reflect the light; we just want to block it.

          The energy has to go somewhere. If you're not reflecting it you're absorbing it and you eventually have to do something else with it.

          • ben_w 21 hours ago

            In fairness, a white sheet and a mirrored sheet will have much the same impact in this regard.

      • eagerpace 1 day ago

        This is where people who think space access is only for satellites and LEO space stations have no imagination. We’re at a place now where if global warming did suddenly start to run away, within a year, we could realistically launch enough solar shades to meaningfully impact the situation. It’s far fetched, but this is why innovation in general is important. Not for what we know now, but for all the unknown ways it could be used in the future.

        • ben_w 21 hours ago

          Right now we're still not close to that kind of capacity.

          I suspect just painting all the rooftops and tarmac white will be about as effective as 2000 Starship launches filled with mylar sheets, plus an L1 delivery system because one thing you really don't want for a global warming mitigation is for them to fall out of LEO and burn up almost immediately from the huge drag-to-inertia ratio.

    • pyrale 1 day ago

      > The problem is, global warming doesn't affect daylight.

      In my book, that would have been a "Fortunately," entry.

  • buckle8017 1 day ago

    This has pretty obvious military applications in addition to the "solar all day" application.

  • 8cvor6j844qw_d6 1 day ago

    > relatively easy to redesign as weapons

    There is a fiction I've read years ago that mentioned satellites becoming makeshift weapons by overheating exposed objects (think reactors, gas trucks, oil refineries) by acting as a solar furnace [1] via mirrors.

    Not sure/don't recall how it deals with practical issues such as clouds and distance/intensity, but good enough for a story I guess.

    [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_furnace

    • appplication 1 day ago

      > The temperature at the focal point may reach 3,500 °C

      I thought this was interesting because it doesn’t really seem like an applicable top level claim, surely this is referring to a specific furnace, not all solar furnaces?

      Then this got me thinking if there is some universal upper bound constraint to these temperatures. E.g. if I recall a telescope can’t make a source object brighter than it actually is, and this just seems like a thermal telescope, so I wonder if that principle applies here or not.

      • ben_w 1 day ago

        > I wonder if that principle applies here or not

        It applies, but also in practice the maximum temperature is lower than the theoretical upper bound.

        https://what-if.xkcd.com/145/

        • appplication 1 day ago

          Oh funny, my intuition when I was writing that was “there’s probably an xkcd what if about this”, but I imagined it be about surrounding the sun with mirrors. Same idea though in the end

        • exe34 23 hours ago

          I'm confident that the physics is correct, but I hate when things are translated for the lay public:

          > "In general, there's no way to "overlay" light beams on each other, because the whole system has to be reversible".

          Behold, my two torches.

    • kristjank 1 day ago

      007: Die Another Day has it as a main plot point.

    • cyberax 1 day ago

      You can't focus sunlight at the satellite distances. And this is a fundamental problem, the focal distance varies for each wavelength so your focus point will be smeared. You need monochromatic light for that (a laser).

      Edit: and also don't forget that the Sun is not a point source and has an appreciable angular size, further making it impossible to focus it with a reasonably-sized lens or mirror.

      • echoangle 16 hours ago

        I see your point for lenses but how would that happen with mirrors?

    • giantg2 1 day ago

      Probably easier to use a MASER

      • adrian_b 23 hours ago

        Unlike for light, in the microwave frequency domain it is easy to make very powerful microwave sources by other means than by using masers, i.e. with various kinds of vacuum tubes.

        Masers are not useful as powerful transmitters, but only as amplifiers with a very low noise or as generators with a very stable frequency.

  • digdugdirk 1 day ago

    In regards to people with reasons to illuminate several sq km at once - I'd bet that major metro areas would see a massive savings in electricity/maintenance if these were deployed over a metro region. Whether that is more than the cost of a satellite? Who knows, it's still fiction until these people try it out. But it's at least an interesting use case.

andwur 1 day ago

How are the economics of this idea meant to be viable? The proposed business model is to park hundreds of millions to billion dollars of satellites in orbit, plus the costs to maintain and operate them, to meet the goal of selective area illumination and solar power. Ignoring the issue of cloud cover, which still seems to be an impediment. That's going to need to directly compete with terrestrial energy storage technology, e.g. batteries, and... general lighting. Both of which are well established, diversified and reliable market segments with vastly cheaper MWh costs compared to beaming a small amount of light down using a satellite.

This strikes me as another hand-waved scifi/fantasy inspired investment, where everyone is so caught up in proving they can achieve this (spoiler: this is obviously possible) that no one has stopped to ask does that achievement lead to a real benefit outside of VC wealth transference?

  • deadbabe 1 day ago

    The revenue potential is huge. Think of public events where people might want to illuminate the area as daylight for several hours. Galas, sports, concerts, parties, etc.. They will all pay top dollar and they have the funds. Could get sponsors, "Today's sunlight brought to you by NordVPN"

    • Chingers 1 day ago

      Frankly I don't see this happening before the year of the Depend Adult Undergarment

      • dizhn 22 hours ago

        I've read enough of it to get the reference.

        • turtleyacht 19 hours ago

          Same. By that point, I realized if that was one thing I got, I must have missed even more.

    • moralestapia 1 day ago

      Rescue operations, etc...

      I saw a presentation by one of the founders where he talked about several use cases where the benefit is just phenomenal.

      They don't fool me for a second, however. The end goal of this is to build a weapon that can fry people/places on demand (but only the bad guys, of course).

      • Robotbeat 1 day ago

        orbital mirrors make very poor weapons because Conservation of Etendue means you fundamentally cannot concentrate very high unless your fill factor is very high (which would require millions of tons in orbit). Lasers are far more effective as weapons as a single aperture launched on a single rocket is sufficient to get high concentration. Microwaves also.

        The military application would just be illumination.

        • moralestapia 1 day ago

          You don't need to go "very high", 80C is more than enough to wreak havoc.

          I'm sure that's attainable with a few hundred sats.

          Can someone do the math?

          • kadoban 1 day ago

            Is it ever, ever going to be cheaper or easier or more effective than just launching a missile? Seems...unlikely just on the face of it.

            • moralestapia 23 hours ago

              Are missiles better than bullets?

              Are bullets better than knives?

              Each thing has its own place.

              • kadoban 23 hours ago

                Not every possible thing has real situations where it's better. There are legitimately terrible solutions to problems, that are dominated by better ones in every situation.

                Like this, for example.

    • toss1 1 day ago

      How huge is it on a continuous basis? Ii's low earth orbit, so only available for a few hours after sunset, AND requires a new satellite in position every 15 min. So for two hours extra illumination you need to support a couple DOZEN satellites, costs of build, launch, control, and maintenance. Even with 100% bookings —every night— it is dubious finances. Seems much more like a scheme to generate a money flow from meme-investors they can siphon off into their pockets then oops, it fails.

      If this is somehow an actual problem, it is far more solvable with tethered blimps or drones, battery pack in a container on a truck, a spool of wire, and light banks as big as you want. AND that isn't subject to clouds (but would be subject to high winds, which would also be more likely to cancel/postpone the event than clouds).

      Meanwhile, they go beyond the already massive disturbance of existing terrestrial lighting and overwhelmingly screw up the biologically critical light signals used by every plant, insect, animal, and human in the zone, and do it at multi-kilometer scale.

      Edit: Even if the revenue potential is actually huge, it is no justification. For any intelligent person, the actual sponsorship message will be "Tonight's lighting brought to you by [Insert_Company_From_Which_I_Will_Never_Buy_Anything_Again]

      This level of stupidity is beyond evil — the kind of lunacy to make a good argument that humans should not exist.

    • ben_w 1 day ago

      Here's a ninety thousand lumen floodlight: https://www.kaufland.de/product/500729350/?search_value=stad...

      And a satellite isn't going to provide "hours" of extra light unless it's a very much higher orbit than current proposals. At 600 km altitude, you're talking 20-30 minutes even with an unbounded number of satellites (and 10-15 minutes when you've only got a few satellites). Same reason as sunset itself happens: Earth just gets in the way.

    • roysting 1 day ago

      Opposed to holding the event during the earth's orientation towards the sun, aka daytime? Someone should tell the gala and event organizers about this idea of daytime.

    • Cthulhu_ 1 day ago

      But they'd be competing with the old fashioned stadium lights. I don't think they would be cheaper somehow.

  • GlassOwAter 1 day ago

    Think of the military benefits.

    • geetee 1 day ago

      Yes, think about how this can be weaponized. Illuminate an area? Or, focus that energy on a single point and you've got sun powered space lasers?

      • bunderbunder 1 day ago

        Except if the reflectors are shaped for wide area illumination, then their focal distance is probably nowhere near the distance from the satellites to the earth’s surface. So I don’t think is any “single point” to be had.

        Heck, I haven’t done the math or anything but I bet even if you did instead use parabolic reflectors that were tuned to focus at the earth’s surface, it would still be very difficult to keep them aimed at a specific point for long enough to achieve significant heating. I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s difficult to achieve an increase in heating that’s close to, say, the heating difference from standing outside at noon as opposed to 5PM. Which then doesn’t do much because you couldn’t effectively use a reflector at noon, anyway. You’d want a lens instead. Or some sort of complicated Newtonian telescope type contraption.

        • geetee 1 day ago

          I don't think these things start out looking like a weapons. Wrong reflector shape? It could just be proving out other aspects. It could also be completely innocent too, but I don't think this is quite conspiracy level thinking.

          • blooalien 1 day ago

            > It could just be proving out other aspects. It could also be completely innocent too, but I don't think this is quite conspiracy level thinking.

            This honestly strikes me as an innocent test of one random idea/technology. The whole "conspiracy level" thing (if it were to ever happen at all) would come later on, and most likely from entirely different people usin' the things discovered from experiments like this one in wholly unacceptable ways because they simply have too much power, money, and time, and not nearly enough good sense between their ears.

            Sad though that as other folk have pointed out, if the technology were to work as expected, then it could also be used to help mitigate global warming by reflecting a specific amount of sunlight away from Earth, too. The sad part is that's likely not what such experiments will lead to initially. The "bad people" tend to be pretty quick to try to weaponize or monetize (or both) anything they take an interest in.

          • bunderbunder 19 hours ago

            I wasn’t speculating on people’s motives; I was speculating on whether the idea is feasible. I don’t think that it is.

      • lefra 1 day ago

        Assuming the orbit is at 200km, these mirrors could only focus the image of the Sun on a 1.7km wide disk (that's (Sun diameter)/(Sun's distance)×(Earth distance)).

        Moreover, the Sun's illuminance is about 1kW/m2 around Earth. 10000×60m2 satellite will thetefore intercept 600MW, so that's 260W/m2 on the focussed area. You're not going to burn anything with that.

    • wildzzz 1 day ago

      Daylight helps you just as much as your enemy. We've got plenty of cutting edge night vision and thermal imaging devices for humans and radar on vehicles. The Army's 160th helicopter regiment can fly nap of the earth on a moonless night. Satellite-based Synthetic Aperture Radar can pickup human sized objects during a pass and can switch to sub-centimeter resolution in finer modes. If anything, the military prefers fighting at night because of the advantage it holds.

      • overfeed 23 hours ago

        > Daylight helps you just as much as your enemy.

        Not if you're persistently using it for multi-week sleep deprivation operation to "soften up" an area before attacking.

        • wildzzz 21 hours ago

          I guess there's some niche applications but that's easily defeated with blackout curtains. Plus soldiers on a base are already pulling night shifts, making everyone on a "night shift". Still, they can only guarantee 100 lux (comparable to indoor lighting) for continuous periods with 50k+ satellites. That's a shit ton of infrastructure all tuned into one small operation.

    • Cthulhu_ 1 day ago

      Such as? Military in the next 100 years will be drone / remote based, they have IR / night vision and soon to be fully automated. Sunlight can be handy for humans but for decades now the only ones that would benefit from it would be foot soldiers, and they're like the last resort (for western forces anyway).

  • verzali 21 hours ago

    Its obviously just a way to separate investors from their cash.

gcr 1 day ago

Wonder what would happen if a hacker focused all ten thousand of them on a single area for an hour or two. Sounds like a really energy-efficient way to demolish a city.

X Wing: Wedge’s Gamble (1996) by Michael Stackpole shows the rebel alliance using similar tricks during the battle of Coruscant.

  • blooalien 1 day ago

    > "Wonder what would happen if a hacker focused all ten thousand of them on a single area for an hour or two. Sounds like a really energy-efficient way to demolish a city."

    I'm far more concerned about the people who own/build stuff like this using it as you suggest (or any of the government pets that they own) than I am about "hackers" doin' such things (although, you're entirely right to have that concern as well, because there's obviously those type of folks out there doin' bad things even with the technology we have already).

  • reader9274 1 day ago

    First, they don't exist and 10k of them will never exist. Second, nothing would happen, the power will be minuscule and last for a very short time focused on such a small patch.

    see: https://youtu.be/lkjyeI0ykGM

  • dheera 1 day ago

    I don't think 50000 60-ft mirrors at the height they intend to fly would cause that to happen. Not enough light gathering power.

    50000 60-ft mirrors is about the same area as a single mirror 2.5 miles across. So the area of the mirrors is about the area of a city. You gather as much light as the city itself in regular daytime. If you focused all of that perfectly efficiently onto a city, that city would just look like daytime.

    • Cthulhu_ 1 day ago

      I think people overestimate the relative strength of the sun.

      Then again, assuming there's no dispersion or loss, 50.000 times the sun focused on a 60ft patch will likely have some impact. But that's complete fiction.

    • etskinner 1 day ago

      I think what you're missing is that they could all be focused in one spot, not spread over the city. If curved reflective buildings can melt siding, and mirror solar plants can melt salt, I'm pretty sure a city's worth of sun focused on, say, a college campus, could start a massive fire

      • dheera 23 hours ago

        I see your concern. The mirrors could be deliberately manufactured to have enough imperfections, or slight reverse curvature, to prevent this. It's possible with properly-designed optics to prevent the mirror from being able to focus on a spot smaller than, say, 1/50000 the mirror's area on the Earth's surface. Make each single mirror only optically capable of focusing down to a 3-mile diameter at best. Then it would be optically impossible to focus all the mirrors to a single 60ft spot, and the theoretical highest brightness at any point on Earth would just be regular daytime levels of light.

  • bryant 1 day ago

    Die Another Day (2003) has a more ridiculous take on the same idea.

  • lenkite 1 day ago

    At some point, nations are going to claim the orbital space above them as national territory and develop technology to shoot down violators.

    • kadoban 1 day ago

      That would be fairly nonsense. There's _very_ few orbits that can stick over a particular place, and it's only places on the equator. We'd be giving up 99+% of useful orbits.

      • kube-system 1 day ago

        I think most current wars in progress have much less logical reasons for happening

        • kadoban 1 day ago

          It's possible, it would just be _very_ dumb. It'd also turn into just...shooting them all down, restrictions of who anything is over wouldn't survive.

      • lenkite 9 hours ago

        If Russia had been the one to launch over ten thousand satellites in mega-constellations occupying LEO space, there would have already been a dozen senate hearings all talking about extraordinary and imminent threat to US national security and urgent need to eliminate the problem.

    • FabCH 1 day ago

      ASAT already exists and multiple countries have already shot down (their own, defunct) satellites.

kklisura 23 hours ago

I do wonder if capital is so cheap or wealth inequality is actually much bigger problem then we thought so that excess capital ends up in ideas like this.

  • deadonarrival 23 hours ago

    Definitely the latter

    • Pay08 22 hours ago

      Definitely the former.

  • rightbyte 22 hours ago

    I don't think those are exclusive.

    • kklisura 22 hours ago

      Not a finance guy or economist, but in my head: capital being cheap still means investors want return on their capital and that puts some upper limit/threshold on the risk that they are willing to take vs Wealthy people having so much excess capital that they are deploying it at any project with zero regard for return, risk, feasibility or reality of it.

goda90 1 day ago

So we've got this problem of the atmosphere trapping too much heat from solar radiation hitting the surface and the plan is to increase the amount of solar radiation hitting the surface?

  • brynnbee 1 day ago

    It's fine just setup mirrors on the ground to bounce the light back to the satellite! (/s)

    • Cthulhu_ 1 day ago

      You jest but if one sattelite can be used to focus light onto the earth, it can also be used to focus it away from it, evening it out.

  • kadoban 1 day ago

    It could only ever increase by the surface area of the satellite lens things. It'll be a rounding error compared to the surface area of Earth (or compared to the effect of greenhouse gasses over the time period you're setting up these things).

  • hoppp 1 day ago

    Exactly. We don't have enough energy apparently and need more warming.

  • verzali 21 hours ago

    You could turn the mirrors around and reflect sunlight away from the planet. That might be useful. Imagine using it during a heatwave.

    • garbagewoman 19 hours ago

      True, deny sunlight to whomever, also sounds dystopian

ElijahLynn 1 day ago

> There are many problems with this proposal, including impacts these satellites will have on human health and safety, as well as on astronomy and the low-Earth environment.

> Flashes during mirror repointing could disrupt pilots and drivers. The light could also disrupt circadian rhythms of plants, animals and humans

blaze33 1 day ago

One question I have is about apparent magnitude: given the satellite's small size (relative to the apparent size of the moon) it would have to be very bright to match the luminosity of the full moon on the surface.

In this article: https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-news/new-kind-of-satel...

> calculated that the Reflect Orbital spacecraft would appear as points of light with a magnitude of -15 [...] might damage the eye.

-15 seems ~10 times brighter than the moon (-12,6) if I got the formula right so it would indeed be very bright.

Reminds me of all the led lighting we have now: one evening on a random street I watched the cars, bicycles, shops, street lamps: all leds, yes a bit brighter and colder than the old bulbs I know, buuut the light sources being very small dots (with no diffuser), it feels very harsh to the eye, at least to me.

Anyway, even if it proves useful for something, it would join the long list of innovations doing one thing at the expense of everyone else (externality == light pollution in this case).

  • jstummbillig 1 day ago

    > Anyway, even if it proves useful for something, it would join the long list of innovations doing one thing at the expense of everyone else (externality == light pollution in this case).

    That's a strange reading. What would keep the benefits from cheaper electricity from diffusing to roughly everyone, as they usually do?

    • blaze33 1 day ago

      I guess you can have both positive and negative externalities.

      I went back to re-read reflectorbital.com, indeed if you're only lighting a solar farm in the middle of nowhere maybe the light pollution is not so bad outside of the targeted zone.

      Still fells like a complicated solution to me. Imo we need more storage innovation and investment, a lot more. We know we'll have more and more intermittent renewables electricity production, we just have to store it.

      • jstummbillig 22 hours ago

        Oh, absolutely. The space mirror idea might be a net terrible idea; more panels and better batteries could simply be it.

        I just don't see why, if this turns out to work, the benefits would not diffuse (principally because I don't see a line of previous innovations where this was not the case, electricity being a prime example of an extremely potent and well diffused commodity).

        • blaze33 19 hours ago

          If it works it could reduce the electricity price in the evenings and mornings.

          Now if I take the french grid example that I know best, for the past 7 days the usual spot price is around 100 to 150€/MWh but between 9am to 6 pm it is greatly reduced due to solar production, frequently down to 0 like today (current heatwave, lots of sun). And today between 1 and 3pm we had up to 5GW of solar production being curtailed. That is on top of the nuclear plants already reducing their output by up to 8GW around noon to accommodate solar power. Hydraulic storage was also running but tops at ~3GW.

          That is to say there's already unused energy during the day, in theory, if you had a MWh battery you could have charged it for free today (sometimes even been paid to do so) and earned 100€ a few hours later.

          One thing I see coming (albeit slowly) is EV cars phasing out IC engines, that once plugged on the grid with their big batteries could be a good distributed storage solution: they recharge during the day whenever the price is low and smooth out the expensive peaks when possible.

ddahlen 21 hours ago

Strictly from an energy conservation argument this doesnt make a whole lot of sense to me. Just some back of the envelope math if they take their current mirror size, make 50k of them and overlap all of the output on the same 3 mile spot (the spot size they claim they will get on a single mirror). With an ideal reflector it is still less than mid-day daylight. Thats 50k satellites to give you direct sun over one 3 mile spot.

I suppose to make this feasible they would have to up the size of the mirrors. Unless this is somehow dirt cheap I can't imagine farmers or solar operators buying this.

dofm 1 day ago

The only non-marginal application for this is military, surely.

It sounds too coarse-grade in terms of its area to be anything other than disruptive socially and ecologically.

Sporting and cultural events? Not really (extending the hours of sunlight over a city does have marginal value for a major celebratory event I suppose, but there just aren't that many of these).

Farming? Don't plants need night too? Does harvesting need the sun anymore?

But being able to illuminate a war zone with spontaneous sunlight you can switch off at will, that is a weapon, not least because if you are the only one with the power, your opponents will have to act knowing they may not have the cover of night.

It's not as dangerous as allowing Elon Musk to launch so many more satellites that he ends up with de facto control over access to earth orbit, but it's pretty dangerous.

  • ben_w 1 day ago

    > The only non-marginal application for this is military, surely.

    I think so, but even then it's a heck of a lot of work to make it useful for that.

    > Farming? Don't plants need night too? Does harvesting need the sun anymore?

    Mostly limited by other things, hence why there's only limited farming in the Sahara, relatively little phytoplankton in the North Atlantic Gyre.

    > But being able to illuminate a war zone with spontaneous sunlight you can switch off at will, that is a weapon, not least because if you are the only one with the power, your opponents will have to act knowing they may not have the cover of night.

    Even then, nah. Militaries have had night vision for ages. We can make a wall-penetrating radar work as heartbeat/breathing sensor out of kit fairly close to (but not close enough to be a software patch from) a WiFi base station.

    • dofm 1 day ago

      I guess it has policing applications, marginally. But most police forces just use helicopters and night vision, and ultimately rely on the disruptive sound of the helicopter to bring people out to look for whoever they are chasing; the noise of a helicopter makes people vigilant.

      I just don't really get it.

  • brookst 1 day ago

    Illuminating a solar farm for 24 hour power generation?

    • dofm 1 day ago

      Is it possible it can deliver anywhere near enough solar energy to make this economically viable?

      It's not going to be full daylight, is it?

      • verzali 21 hours ago

        Absolutely impossible to do that in any viable sense.

    • ben_w 1 day ago

      At the orbits they're talking about, at best 30 minutes before dawn and after sunset. Earth gets in the way, have to go much much higher to get 24 hour coverage, and if you can focus that well over that distance you've got the optics for a super-weapon.

      And as this is optical, won't go through clouds. This is why beamed power discussions often talk about converting to microwaves instead, though that comes with an even bigger spot size on the ground.

dkersten 1 day ago

Finally, we can replace daylight saving time by just making more daylight instead

  • downrightmike 1 day ago

    We've tried to do this at ground level to make molten salt power and all it did was fry birds and the project is shut down.

assbuttbuttass 1 day ago

We've entered the "bond villain" era of VC startups

  • ben_w 1 day ago

    That was some time ago. Musk himself tweeted about getting a volcano lair in 2015.

    • fragmede 1 day ago

      2014 was the inflection point. 2013 brought us the term unicorn for companies, and was just long enough after the iphone that we were starting to make sense of it. That's when Elon Musk became a household name thanks to Tesla and SpaceX. Then there was Palantir. Google bought Deepmind in 2014. Google Facebook Amazon and Apple showed founders that software startups could transform the world, and the world leapt at the chance.

  • datakan 1 day ago

    Someone tried to recruit me back in 2000 for a startup that would sell a box you connect to your computer allowing you to smell things over the internet. I'll let you guess what industry he was targeting.

    • wildzzz 1 day ago

      Ah yes, the best part of human intimacy: the smells!

mike_hock 23 hours ago

> SpaceX filed with the FCC for one million more satellites

Sure, that's only gonna cost a couple quadrillion dollars or so.

jackyinger 1 day ago

How is this under the FCC’s authority?

  • petcat 1 day ago

    > The FCC said that the “risks of harm raised on the record regarding Reflect Orbital’s solar reflector are unrelated to the Commission’s role in authorizing use of radiofrequency spectrum.”

    The FCC only approved that the satellite would not interfere with other radio communications, not the ultimate purpose. They said themselves they don't have authority for that.

  • tadfisher 23 hours ago

    It should be under the EPA's authority. This has the potential to disrupt animal behavior within the illuminated area if it truly is as bright as a full moon.

seydor 1 day ago

Don't we have the moon for that?

  • Cthulhu_ 1 day ago

    Yes but what if you could have a second moon, on-demand?

    • 9cb14c1ec0 1 day ago

      MAAS

      • DamonHD 1 day ago

        Obvs "MaaS" capitalisation for the full stock valuation.

        Obvs(2) a variant of this service has traditionally been provided for free by drunken teens. They might prove to be better and more thoughtful custodians of investment funds.

    • seydor 1 day ago

      nothing beats free

spl757 13 hours ago

In the US, people are going to shoot at it with guns. Bullets that go straight up? Probably not lethal when it falls back to the ground, tumbling and lacking ballistic energy, but bullets that follows a ballistic trajectory are going to hit with force. What could posssibly go wrong?

swasheck 1 day ago

somebody watched die another day (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Die_Another_Day) and thought, “hmm. great idea.”

  • blooalien 1 day ago

    It's actually more'n a little bit scary how much of modern "politics" seems as if it could be driven by having watched any of a number of movies and thinking "We should do that!" When I hear people talk about politicians bein' like spoiled brat children in adult bodies, I tend to think that sounds like exactly the type of mentality that could see something all messed up and scary in a movie and want to try to do it in the real world. What makes it even more scary in my mind is that we've allowed those type of people to gather entirely too much money and power such that they have the option available to them to seriously consider trying such horrible ideas.

icase 1 day ago

i give you: the industrial revolution and its consequences

giantg2 1 day ago

This is a terrible idea. Light cycles affect many natural functions in the world. We already see some of this with light pollution. This idea is basically light pollution on an industrial scale.

verzali 21 hours ago

Baffling that the FCC is the agency to approve such a thing.

ianeff 23 hours ago

When Mister Burns did this, people got _pissed_.

peeters 1 day ago

The fact that they're spelling this Earendil, not Earendel, makes me think this is a direct reference to Tolkien's work. It's pretty weird for dystopian industrial initiatives to be named after characters in a work whose most unambiguous message was that rampant industrialization was ruining the world.

  • consp 1 day ago

    Sounds like a morning star reference (via some obscure Christian texts) which I will draw further towards Lucifer via Latin. Do with this idea as you please.

    • peeters 4 hours ago

      Tolkien's Earendil was definitely a reference to the morning star, but outside his legendarium I don't know of anyone spelling it "dil" instead of "del". If it was supposed to be a non-Tolkien reference I would've expected them to spell it accordingly.

Avicebron 1 day ago

“The regular early morning yell of horror was the sound of Arthur Dent waking up and suddenly remembering where he was" - Douglas Adams

globular-toast 1 day ago

This is genuinely the stuff of nightmares. Imagine not even being able to have night time any more.

ChrisArchitect 1 day ago
  • ryankrage77 1 day ago

    Annoyingly and predictably, reads like AI slop. You can practically guess the prompt goes something along the lines of 'write a press release explaining why this bad idea is a good idea'.

    • blondie9x 1 day ago

      I think this company intentionally ignored discussing how battery storage has made solar energy a much more effective and viable solution.

      • ben_w 1 day ago

        Never mind that, they're ignoring light bulbs for the S&R stuff.

        At least, best I can make out over this UI choice: https://imgur.com/gallery/bad-ui-5t0O0SH

        (Why, of all the things, would someone use a fire as their example for this? Fire is famously a light source. Also, famously, smoke is a thing that blocks out light from above).

      • datakan 1 day ago

        And also cheaper than launching stuff into space. This may have been approved but that's a long ways off from actual viability.

        • Robotbeat 1 day ago

          Launching a gossamer thin mirror in space is not very expensive. Broad strokes claiming anything launched to space is going to be a more expensive solution has to level with the fact that GPS and quite a lot of telecommunications and Earth observation seem to have incredible leverage if launched to space instead of just using ground based solutions.

          • ben_w 1 day ago

            For this use, "gossamer thin" is unlikely. You want to control where you point the mirror, it needs a structure that not only doesn't flop around when you torque your spacecraft, but also doesn't have surprise vibrational modes that squeeze and expand the illumination zone.

            (Things I'm learning while researching what is now looking like an eight thousand or more word blog post about why a different space thing, data centres, is also not a good investment; my guess is this would be less of a problem if you used mirrors like this to cool the earth by reflecting sunlight away instead of towards).

    • postalrat 1 day ago

      Do you have anything to say about the project itself or do you only care about your perception of ai slop?

      • brookst 1 day ago

        I swear this is getting so common. “Well I’d be fine with eugenics and sterilization of the poor, but the website uses em-dashes a lot so I think it’s just awful AI slop”.

bix6 1 day ago

> Eärendil-1

Can everyone just stop with all the LOTR references already why the fuck is this such a thing.

  • Robotbeat 1 day ago

    Nah. Should have been named after the Two Trees of Valinor, Telperion and Laurelin.

  • oersted 1 day ago

    I initially quite liked it, particularly when the references are a bit more obscure, generally from classic scifi/fantasy. You can end with a nice sounding name and a small wink to fellow nerds.

    But it is such a shame that it has started to become the brand of dark-side (militaristic/authoritarian) Silicon Valley: Palantir, Anduril, this… Tolkien would be so very sad.

    PS: Palantir is at least rather fitting and honest, it’s literally an evil crystal ball (at least the one shown in the movies).

formvoltron 1 day ago

this is the sort of startup we get when memes rule the investing landscape.

sensanaty 1 day ago

What the fuck are we doing as a species?

burnt-resistor 1 day ago

Ahem. Ladies and Gentlemen. I have placed in orbit a giant mirror that will reflect 40% of the Sun's rays. Thus cooling Earth. Observe.

ck2 1 day ago

at some point some rogue country is going to do a starfish-prime event

create an artificial LEO radiation belt on purpose and wipe out 99% of satellites

part of me is oddly rooting for it these days

make Musk a millionaire again

  • itsmeagainhere 22 hours ago

    You are the rogue country.

    (And you actually know that, but since it benefits you, or at least so you are told, you are "not seeing" that.)

hunmernop 1 day ago

Chinese outcry? There’s a lot of that in social media, their bot warriors are everywhere. Same with AI and anything that gives the USA competitive edge.

  • hunmernop 1 day ago

    Apparently there’s a ton here on ycombinator judging by the downvotes

effed3 1 day ago

Earth orbits, low orbits above all, are a finite resource, and suffer pollution as every environment, with all this kind of satellites growing in number to millions, things can go badly: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kessler_syndrome

Apart tecnical and scientific reasons (no need to use thousand or million of sats), apart big speculations (suspect is the main reason), many problems can be resolved in others ways.

  • effed3 1 day ago

    putting mirrors in orbit to have (little) more light is like buiding city underwater to have more cool. ops this last will be way less stupid in the future... To downvote a different opinion without arguing is same kind of attitude: stay fresh.