The development of low earth orbit (LEO) mega-constellation fundamentally threatens ground-based optical astronomical observations. To study the photometric properties of the LEO mega-constellations, we used the Xinglong 50 cm telescope to conduct a large-sample, high-precision, and multicolour target-tracking photometry of two typical LEO mega-constellations: Starlink and OneWeb. Over a three-month observation period starting on 2022 January 1, we collected 1447 light curves of 404 satellites in four typical versions: Starlink v1.0, DarkSat, VisorSat, Starlink v1.5, and OneWeb. According to data statistics, Starlink v1.0 has the smallest median magnitude at clear and Sloan Digital Sky Survey gri band, and OneWeb is the dimmest bus. The brightness of Starlink v1.5 is slightly brighter than VisorSat. We construct a detailed photometric model with solar phase angle variations by calculating the illumination-visibility geometry based on the orbital parameters. Our data analysis shows that the solar phase angle is the significant characteristic which influencing Starlink satellites’ brightness, but it is not sensitive to OneWeb satellites. VisorSat and Starlink v1.5 versions, which are equipped with deployable visors, have significantly reduced scattered light compared to the previous Starlink v1.0 version. The multiband LOWESS and colour index are analysed in characterizing the energy and colour features of LEO mega-constellation satellites. This work found that the proportion of scattered sunlight mitigation achieved with VisorSat and Starlink v1.5 was 55.1 and 40.4 per cent, respectively. The colour index of different buses shows an evident clustering feature. Our observation and analysis could provide valuable quantitative data and photometric models, which can contribute to assessing the impact of LEO mega-constellations on astronomical observations.
CITATION STYLE
Zhi, H., Jiang, X., & Wang, J. (2024). Multicolour photometry of LEO mega-constellations Starlink and OneWeb. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 530(4), 5006–5015. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stae693
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