Pre-Sputnik Satellites
An example of repeating glints in a blue Palomar Sky Survey II image taken in 1980s, here with a faint streak linking them together. The left column shows the POSS-II image, and the right column the Pan-STARRS image (> year 2015). The example uses the VASCO citizen science web interface. An actual case of a “train of glints”, can have significantly sparser spacing and can be composed of fewer glints than shown here.
The 48-inch Samuel Oschin Telescope on Mount Palomar
Before the launch of the first satellites in 1957, our Sky was free from the thousands of satellites and millions of pieces of debris at geosynchronous orbits that haunt the skies. All pieces give off fast, bright flashes of lights that contaminate our view of the universe.
Searches for these satellites are done in collaboration with the Spanish Virtual Observatory and in conjunction with the VASCO citizen science project (http://ml-blink.org)
Depictions of glints that can occur from satellites, detectable in telescope photographs taken before 1959.