Neat. I stopped looking years ago, because it seemed short of launching my own satellites in to orbit, every last one of them was compromised. I remember Google Moon/Mars was basically ALL sus blurring. It'd be cool to see what Elon's satellites see.
you sure? I wouldn't put that many satellites in to space without cameras; especially if I were a billionaire and the price difference didn't matter. Not to mention, they probably have some equipped if for no other reason than navigation / geopositioning.
They are communication satellites. Their orbits are selected for optimal communication, not surveillance. Collection of photo-intelligence is not part of their mission and would require large apertures for high resolution (if you want that). Another subsystem is extra complexity, extra volume, extra weight, extra power, extra processing, reduced system throughput, reduced system reliability, and MORE expense (per satellite, and fewer launched on a single booster).
What you wouldn't do is know much about satellites. You don't do navigation with cameras. You use GPS and maybe star sensors and horizon sensors.
Neat. I stopped looking years ago, because it seemed short of launching my own satellites in to orbit, every last one of them was compromised. I remember Google Moon/Mars was basically ALL sus blurring. It'd be cool to see what Elon's satellites see.
The Starlink satellites have no cameras.
you sure? I wouldn't put that many satellites in to space without cameras; especially if I were a billionaire and the price difference didn't matter. Not to mention, they probably have some equipped if for no other reason than navigation / geopositioning.
They are communication satellites. Their orbits are selected for optimal communication, not surveillance. Collection of photo-intelligence is not part of their mission and would require large apertures for high resolution (if you want that). Another subsystem is extra complexity, extra volume, extra weight, extra power, extra processing, reduced system throughput, reduced system reliability, and MORE expense (per satellite, and fewer launched on a single booster).
What you wouldn't do is know much about satellites. You don't do navigation with cameras. You use GPS and maybe star sensors and horizon sensors.