PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Interference to astronomy the unintended consequence of faster internet

Curtin University researchers have undertaken the world’s biggest survey of low frequency satellite radio emissions, finding Starlink satellites are significantly interfering with radio astronomy observations, potentially impacting discovery and researc

2025-07-23
(Press-News.org) Curtin University researchers have undertaken the world’s biggest survey of low frequency satellite radio emissions, finding Starlink satellites are significantly interfering with radio astronomy observations, potentially impacting discovery and research.

 

Unintended signals from satellites - leaked from onboard electronics - can drown out the faint radio waves astronomers use to study the universe.

 

Researchers from the Curtin University node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), hosted at the Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy (CIRA), focused on the Starlink mega-constellation as it has the most satellites in orbit, at more than 7000 during the time of the study.

 

Starlink is a private satellite internet service launched by aerospace company, SpaceX, which promises faster internet connections, particularly for rural and remote areas.

 

The research team collected and analysed 76 million images of the sky using a prototype station for the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), which will be the world’s largest and most sensitive radio telescope once fully built later this decade.

 

PhD candidate and study lead Dylan Grigg said the team detected more than 112,000 radio emissions from 1806 Starlink satellites, making it the most comprehensive catalogue of satellite radio emissions at low frequencies to date.

 

“Starlink is the most immediate and frequent source of potential interference for radio astronomy: it launched 477 satellites during this study’s four-month data collection period alone,” Mr Grigg said.

 

“In some datasets, we found up to 30 per cent of our images showed interference from a Starlink satellite.”

 

Mr Grigg said the issue wasn’t just the number of satellites, but the strength of the signals and the frequencies they were visible at.

 

“Some satellites were detected emitting in bands where no signals are supposed to be present at all, such as the 703 satellites we identified at 150.8 MHz, which is meant to be protected for radio astronomy,” Mr Grigg said.

 

“Because they may come from components like onboard electronics and they’re not part of an intentional signal, astronomers can’t easily predict them or filter them out.”

 

CIRA Executive Director and study co-author John Curtin Distinguished Professor Steven Tingay said there was scope for regulatory improvement to help avoid satellites interfering with research.

 

“Current International Telecommunication Union regulations focus on intentional transmissions and do not cover this type of unintended emission,” Professor Tingay said.

 

“Starlink isn’t the only satellite network, but it is by far the biggest and its emissions are now increasingly prominent in our data.

 

“We hope this study adds support for international efforts to update policies that regulate the impact of this technology on radio astronomy research, that are currently underway. 

 

“It is important to note that Starlink is not violating current regulations, so is doing nothing wrong.  Discussions we have had with SpaceX on the topic have been constructive.”

 

Professor Tingay said satellite technology and radio astronomy were both important but needed to exist in harmony.

 

“We’re standing on the edge of a golden era where the SKA will help answer the biggest questions in science: how the first stars formed, what dark matter is and even test Einstein’s theories,” Professor Tingay said.

 

“But it needs radio silence to succeed. We recognise the deep benefits of global connectivity but we need balance and that starts with an understanding of the problem, which is the goal of our work.”

 

‘The Growing Impact of Unintended Starlink Broadband Emission on Radio Astronomy in the SKA-Low Frequency Range’ was published in Astronomy and Astrophysics.

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Women politicians judged more harshly than men, research finds

2025-07-23
When women political candidates deviate from expectations or the views of their party, they are judged far more harshly than men by voters, a new study in Politics & Gender, published on behalf of the American Political Science Association by Cambridge University Press, reveals.  The research also found that voters begin campaigns with greater uncertainty about women candidates than about men, leading them to scrutinise women candidates to a greater extent when forming opinions of them.  The ...

Surprising rocky worlds revealed around a small star

2025-07-22
A team led by the Trottier Institute for Research on Exoplanets (IREx)  has achieved the most precise study to date of the L 98-59 planetary system, and confirmed the existence of a fifth planet in the star’s habitable zone, where conditions could allow liquid water to exist. Volcanic planets, a sub-Earth, and a water world L 98-59, a small red dwarf located just 35 light-years from Earth, hosts three small transiting exoplanets discovered in 2019, thanks to NASA's TESS space telescope, and a fourth planet revealed through radial velocity measurements with the European Southern Observatory's ESPRESSO spectrograph. All four planets orbit their parent star in ...

UC Davis Health receives $3.6 million grant from NIH to improve eye gene therapy

2025-07-22
(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) — The UC Davis Department of Ophthalmology has received a five-year, $3.6 million grant from the National Eye Institute to explore a new way to treat vision loss using gene therapy. The research could lead to safer and more effective treatments for people with serious eye diseases like macular degeneration and inherited blindness. It could also lead to treatments that don’t require surgery and can be done more widely in clinics. “We’re excited ...

Heatwaves to increase in frequency, duration under global warming

2025-07-22
As the climate becomes warmer on average, it makes intuitive sense that we will see more hot days and we've had predictions of this for some time. However, the duration of heatwaves — how many days in a row exceed a temperature that is unusually hot for a given region — can be very important for impacts on humans, livestock and ecosystems. Predicting how these durations will change under a long-term warming trend is more challenging because day-to-day temperatures are correlated — tomorrow's temperatures have a dependence on today's temperature. This study takes ...

GLP-1 diabetes drugs likely trump metformin for curbing dementia risk in type 2 diabetes

2025-07-22
GLP-1 receptor agonists, a class of drug used to treat type 2 diabetes, likely trump the widely prescribed metformin for curbing dementia risk in people with the condition, finds the largest study of its kind, published in the open access journal BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care. The findings suggest that future clinical guidelines for the treatment of type 2 diabetes would do well to consider prioritising drugs with both blood glucose and neuroprotective effects, say the researchers.  Published research suggests that both GLP-1 receptor agonists and metformin, which are widely used to treat type 2 diabetes, protect the brains of people with the disease. But as ...

Annual UK cost of mental health disorder PTSD likely tops £40 billion

2025-07-22
The annual UK cost of the mental health disorder PTSD is likely to top £40 billion, but the figures are based on 2020-1 prevalence rates—the most recently available—and don’t include many indirect costs, such as family support services, finds a cost analysis published in the open access journal BMJ Open. The societal and financial impacts of this increasingly common condition have been “gravely” undervalued, conclude the researchers.  Post-traumatic stress disorder, more commonly referred to ...

Study: Powerlifting through breast cancer – how a breast cancer survivor defied chemotherapy with strength trainin

2025-07-22
MIAMI, FLORIDA (July 22, 2025) – LaShae Rolle, 27, is a competitive powerlifer who could squat 441 pounds, bench 292 pounds and deadlift 497 pounds. She is also a breast cancer survivor and researcher and the lead author on a first-of-its kind study documenting elite-level strength training during active breast cancer treatment. The study challenges the long-held belief that cancer patients should stick to low- or moderate-intensity exercise and suggests that with individualized and symptom-informed exercise planning, even ...

Sustainability Accelerator selects 41 new projects with potential for rapid scale-up

2025-07-22
The Sustainability Accelerator at the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability has selected 41 projects spanning biology, agriculture, electricity, industry, and water. The teams involve 67 faculty from 27 departments across five of the university’s seven schools. The projects are as diverse as the problems they are trying to solve, ranging from developing plant-based meat alternatives to optimizing low-carbon steel production to helping coastal communities adapt to threats of saltwater ...

First impressions count: How babies are talked about during ultrasounds impacts parent perceptions, caregiving relationship

2025-07-22
Most parents can think back to the first ultrasound image they saw of their unborn child, and may even be able to remember what impression that image had on them. Would their child be an active toddler, a tad bit ornery or stubborn, sweet and cuddly, fiercely independent, or shy and cooperative? New research suggests these initial perceptions may have been formed, at least in part, in response to how the health care provider described the baby during the exam. These prenatal care experiences play a large role in shaping how parents ...

Next-gen tech can detect disease biomarker in period blood

2025-07-22
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Almost 200 million people, including children, around the world have endometriosis, a chronic disease in which the lining of the uterus grows outside of the uterus. More severe symptoms, such as extreme pain and potentially infertility, can often be mitigated with early identification and treatment, but no single point-of-care diagnostic test for the disease exists despite the ease of access to the tissue directly implicated. While Penn State Professor Dipanjan Pan said that the blood and tissue shed from the uterus each month is often overlooked — and even stigmatized by some — as medical waste, menstrual effluent could enable earlier, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Hidden in plain sight: A century-old museum specimen turns out to be a landmark in evolution

People with substance use disorder were 24% more likely to require unplanned hospital readmission within 30 days of previous discharge

New study brings vaccine hopes for deadly Nipah virus

Can a compound produced by deep-sea bacteria treat cancer?

How does infection with respiratory syncytial virus affect the health of older adults?

Will implantable brain-computer interfaces soon benefit people with motor impairments?

Can certain fungi boost the micronutrient content of bread wheat?

AI serves as ‘crystal ball’ for predicting outcomes in hospitalized cirrhosis patients

Transfer printing technology for lithium protective layers to prevent battery explosions

Beetroot juice lowers blood pressure in older people by changing oral microbiome

Metal-free supercapacitor stack delivers 200 volts from just 3.8 cm³

Spatial multi-omics maps how metformin protects precisely across diabetic kidney zones

Weight loss benefits of Tirzepatide persist after stopping treatment in Chinese adults

Interference to astronomy the unintended consequence of faster internet

Women politicians judged more harshly than men, research finds

Surprising rocky worlds revealed around a small star

UC Davis Health receives $3.6 million grant from NIH to improve eye gene therapy

Heatwaves to increase in frequency, duration under global warming

GLP-1 diabetes drugs likely trump metformin for curbing dementia risk in type 2 diabetes

Annual UK cost of mental health disorder PTSD likely tops £40 billion

Study: Powerlifting through breast cancer – how a breast cancer survivor defied chemotherapy with strength trainin

Sustainability Accelerator selects 41 new projects with potential for rapid scale-up

First impressions count: How babies are talked about during ultrasounds impacts parent perceptions, caregiving relationship

Next-gen tech can detect disease biomarker in period blood

UTA unveils supercomputing research hub

Americans prefer a more diverse society

Masonic Medical Research Institute publishes breakthrough study on combating heart disease linked to obesity and high-fat diet

How our body keeps time in the heat

Not just a messenger: Developing nano-sized delivery agents that also provide therapeutic treatment

AI used for real-time selection of actionable messages for government and public health campaigns

[Press-News.org] Interference to astronomy the unintended consequence of faster internet
Curtin University researchers have undertaken the world’s biggest survey of low frequency satellite radio emissions, finding Starlink satellites are significantly interfering with radio astronomy observations, potentially impacting discovery and researc