Submitted by OvidPerl t3_119wv28 in askscience
Inspired by a Mastodon thread by Astronomy Professor Sam Lawler.
Elon Musk plans 42,000 Starlink satellites. With an operational lifespan of five years, after which they're de-orbited. We will have an average of 23 (42,000/(365*5)) satellites entering the Earth's atmosphere every day.
At 1,250 kg each (for the Starlink 2.0 satellites), that's 29 tons of satellites entering our atmosphere every day, much of that being aluminum. In other words, that will be almost 10,000 tons of aluminum effectively being aerosolized in our upper atmosphere every year.
Have there been any environmental impact studies of this?
Side note: For those who point out that we have two to three times more meteorites (by mass) entering our atmosphere than Starlink satellites, the meteorites are mostly silicates.
Also, unlike geoengineering techniques to inject aerosols into our atmosphere to combat global warming, we will have no effective way of shutting off the rain of Starlink satellites. Even if launches are stopped immediately, that's five years worth of satellites coming down. And without a "smoking gun" demonstrating the damages, SpaceX will likely continue launching those satellites to protect their revenue.
CrustalTrudger t1_j9otg0d wrote
It's a good question, but one that does not seem like it's answered yet (though it is theoretically addressable with global climate models, etc). There are a variety of papers in the last few years highlighting that both emissions from increasingly frequent rocket launches and material (like aluminum and other metals) added to the atmosphere via satellite deorbiting could have substantial impacts on a variety of things, but almost all of these are really calls for more attention and research as opposed to answers to the question itself (e.g., Ross & Toohey, 2019, Hobbs et al., 2020, Boley & Byers, 2021, Schulz & Glassmeier, 2021, Adilov et al., 2022, Ross & Jones, 2022, Shutler et al., 2022, Lawrence et al., 2022). There is at least one paper directly trying to answer this with modelling for the emissions from increasingly frequent rocket launches (e.g., Maloney et al., 2022), but I at least could not find a paper actually demonstrating what the impact of addition of significant amounts of metal to the upper atmosphere would be (beyond the generalizations in the previously linked papers that suggest it would likely do something). The closest is really the Hobbs et al., 2020, but sadly this is an abstract for a conference presentation and I couldn't find a follow up (might still be in the works, lag time between stuff presented at conferences and eventual publication can definitely be several years). It does seem like there is a fair bit of interest in this within pockets of the scientific community (as illustrated by all the "we should pay attention to this" papers cited above), so I wouldn't be surprised if there are studies in the works on this, but at least for me it's far enough outside my area that I don't know that for sure (maybe others more in this space can provide some details).