Estimating the silhouette of large resident space objects through decreased intensity measurements is an established technique in astronomy. Synthetic Aperture Silhouette Imaging (SASI) applies these concepts using a North-South oriented linear array of hobby telescopes to detect decreased intensity from stars as satellites occult the stars. Within the past twenty years this technique has been expanded to satellites near Earth in mathematical and computer models as well as scaled laboratory demonstrations. Often this technique is discussed in relation to the geostationary (GEO) belt of satellites, but it could also be applied in other orbital regimes (where a linear North-South array configuration is likely non-optimal). Previous work has indicated that orbital ephemeris data may lack sufficient accuracy to reliably plan measurements of actual satellite occultations (using a single telescope). This paper discusses the progress of an initial field test using a single telescope equipped with a photon detector and astronomical camera. The goal is to measure intensity drops from stars when satellites are predicted to pass between the star and the telescope in a ground station. An 11-inch Celestron Rowe-Ackermann-Schmitt Astrograph is mounted on an Astro-Physics 1600GTO mount and equipped with a ThorLabs single photon counting module SPCM50A and ZWO ASI174 camera. The target is the International Space Station (ISS) in hopes that the larger area of the object’s silhouette will overcome uncertainties in the orbital data. This initial field test informs the design of an individual telescope in a SASI array by capturing challenges, limitations and potential solutions. Hardware issues like periodic error in the telescope mount, image focus, and USB overload led to hardware upgrades and substitutions. Environmental conditions impacted the performance of the telescope mount and camera due to the site location limitations. Ephemeris updates make long-term planning difficult, so occultation predictions need to be reassessed as close to the transit time as possible. These and other issues arose during the initial field test, highlighting challenges that need to be overcome to further develop SASI.
Shadow imaging has been used for decades in astronomical observation of distant space objects. Synthetic Aperture Silhouette Imaging applies this technology to space domain awareness to enable fine resolution silhouette images of satellites in the Geosynchronous (GEO) belt to be collected with a linear array of hobby telescopes. As a satellite passes between a star and the observer on the ground, a North-South telescope array can detect the reduced stellar intensity as the shadow of the satellite passes over from West to East. This paper discusses the resolution advantages of collecting and stacking shadow images at multiple wavelengths to arrive at a multispectral improvement factor. A laboratory model is scaled to GEO according to the Fresnel diffraction integral before the silhouette is recovered through a phase retrieval algorithm. The recovered silhouettes are stacked and evaluated against the image of the original laboratory target to determine how closely the images match. The best Percent Difference (PD) between the reconstructed silhouette and the target silhouette is found by scaling the intensity of the diffraction pattern using a look up table to the fourth power. The best PD from a stacked image is using five layers between 475 nm and 675 nm. The five layers produce a resolution of approximately 50 cm. Each additional layer improves resolution from the expected value by approximately 4.23 cm from two layers to six layers.
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