McMurdo Station houses anywhere from 100 to 1,000 scientists and staff at a given time, but some of those researchers venture out to field camps.

McMurdo Station houses anywhere from 100 to 1,000 scientists and staff at a given time, but some of those researchers venture out to field camps.
Image: Wirestock Creators (Shutterstock)

Elon Musk’s Starlink is getting even closer to a widespread reality. The satellite internet constellation from SpaceX is now steadily beaming information to and from Antarctica, according to scientists currently stationed on the remote continent.

The National Science Foundation announced that it would be bringing SpaceX’s Starlink internet connection to Antarctica in September of last year via a terminal in McMurdo Station, a remote research station frequented by visiting scientists. While Starlink has successfully connected McMurdo Station, scientists at field sites in the tundra are now reporting that they are receiving internet connections at more remote campsites.

“We’ve tested Starlink in a Antarctic field camp & is now testing at McMurdo Station (pop. 800+)!” wrote climatologist Peter Neff on Twitter this past Saturday. “Exciting to see how this & other modes of high-speed connectivity can advance our communication & might alter how we do science on the ice!”

Successful and continued connection to some of the most remote parts of Antarctica—some of the most remote parts of the world—requires a laser network, as SpaceX pointed out following the successful tests at McMurdo Station in September. The optical space laser network uses lasers to relay data between the satellites in the constellation, as opposed to having them communicate with stations on the ground. This laser network has connected remote parts of Canada, Australia, and Antarctica to Starlink.

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Szabi Kisded

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