They were pissing off astronomers, so SpaceX now orients the solar panels in a direction where they don't reflect so much light back. It takes a few days after launch to get it done, sometimes longer. After that you usually just see one satellite per train. They are still all going overhead but most of them aren't reflecting light back.lotharsandwich wrote: Mon May 24, 2021 5:39 pmWe saw them too. Supposedly they'll become fainter as they move to a higher orbit. Before looking them up online I thought they must be military helicopters because they were so evenly spaced, though they seemed too high up and were silent.Johnny Doglands wrote: Mon May 24, 2021 5:30 pmYou just described Starlink. To see it again, here's a useful link - https://findstarlink.com/.scrotescape wrote: Sun May 23, 2021 7:24 am i saw a line of lights moving across the sky last night from west to east --ran out side and it was gone
They are also experimenting with non-reflective paint. There's already a shit ton of them up there, beaming the internets down to earth. They launch more every few weeks and will continue to do so until Elon Musk is God Emperor of the planet Earth ...
Or until there's enough of them to provide everyone with Satellite Internet, whichever comes first.