New Moon(s) out there

If you missed this news, read it again: it’s not a scam and it’s impressive in its own right. We’re going to have another “moon” (or moons, intended as  satellites) out there, and it is going to address, and possibly solve, the Chinese needs for all-night illumination. First city to benefit from them: Chengdu, one of the major cities of China backyard provinces.

Wu Chunfeng, head of Tian Fu New Area Science Society in Chengdu in southwest China, told China Daily that the plan is to place the “moon” into orbit above Chengdu via the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province by 2020. If successful, three additional “moons” will be launched by 2022.” According to the plan, the Chinese would launch a satellite about 300 miles above the ground, which would be enough to light up around 50 square miles.

There are many who think this ambitious plan is not going to work as smoothly has the Chinese authorities imagine. The biggest flaw, in their opinion, is that a satellite can maybe fly low enough to deliver the necessary light but it wouldn’t be able to stay in one place as required.

Their claim for 1 LEO sat at 300 miles must be a typo or misinformed spokesperson.[…] You could hover a satellite over a particular city, which of course is not possible. Satellites that stay over a fixed point on the Earth, what’s called a geostationary orbit, sit much further away: about 38,000 miles. At that distance, the reflective surface would need to be massive to deliver enough light for humans to see back to Earth. At a distance of just 300 miles the moon would whip around the Earth at thousands of miles per hour, beaming its light on any one place for only a fraction of a second. You could keep an artificial moon in place with rocket thrusters but […] it would eat up fuel, adding to the cost and requiring constant refueling.” (Read the whole story here).

No matter how this is going to end, the idea is daring, and I can’t wait to see how it ends. Stay tuned.

9 Comments

  1. sjhigbee

    A great article and it certainly sounds like something out of a sci fi novel! Thank you for sharing this fascinating snippet…

    Reply
    1. Steph P. Bianchini (Post author)

      Thanks Sarah! A good idea for an SF story 😉

      Reply
  2. ccyager

    ooooops! When I saw this on FB, I thought it was about the exomoon that was found in a solar system about 8K light years away from us. The Chinese doing this makes me giggle. It reminds me of a sci fi book I read in the last few years but I can’t remember which one. It’ll be interesting to follow this and see what happens.

    Reply
    1. Steph P. Bianchini (Post author)

      Well, one of the cases reality beats fiction, isn’t it?

      Reply
  3. maddalena@spaceandsorcery

    It’s a fascinating idea indeed, but I’m afraid I’ve seen too many catastrophic movies not to see all the ways this could go horribly wrong….

    Reply
    1. Steph P. Bianchini (Post author)

      yes, you’re right. People who read SF already imagined all sort of things…! 😀

      Reply
  4. Margaret Ball

    Over a hundred years ago my home town decided to use super-tall towers with carbon arc lamps for street lighting. They were called moonlight towers because they were soooo tall (around 150 feet).

    Now you have to put something in orbit to call your inadequate street lighting “moonlight.”

    Reply
    1. Steph P. Bianchini (Post author)

      Well said. Quite interesting, the story of the towers. Where’s your city, by the way?

      Reply
      1. Margaret Ball

        Austin, Texas

        Reply

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