Light pollution is rapidly gaining ground and the number of stars visible to the naked eye at night in some places might be halved in less than twenty years, according to a scientific study unveiled Thursday in the journal Science.
The increase in this pollution by artificial light is greater than what had already been measured via satellite observations of the Earth at night.
In order to assess the effect of artificial light on the night sky, the scientists relied on star observations made between 2011 and 2022 by some 51,000 “citizen scientists“, especially in the United States and Europe.
The evolution of the number of reported visible stars makes it possible to deduce that the luminosity of the sky increased annually by 9.6% on average in the places of residence of the participants, according to the researchers.
With this growth in light pollution, a place from which one might observe 250 stars would see, over 18 years, this figure reduce to 100.
LED does not completely prevent light pollution
This study notably coincided with the replacement of many outdoor lighting by light-emitting diodes (LEDs), but according to the researchers, the impact on the light of the sky of this transition to LEDs is not clear.
“Star visibility has deteriorated rapidly, despite (or perhaps because of) the use of LEDs for street lighting“, said the scientists.
“Existing lighting policies do not prevent light pollution“, at least on a large scale, according to them.
But light pollution goes far beyond a purely scientific aspect.
“It used to be that when people went out at night, they kind of faced the cosmos“, told AFP Christopher Kyba, first author of the study and physicist at the GFZ Center in Potsdam, Germany.You go outside, you see the stars, the Milky Way…“
“And now it feels like it’s become an unusual event“, he said. “And that surely has consequences for us (…), no longer living what was almost universal.“