This is shown by a science study based on a worldwide Citizen Science project on light pollution, which has collected data in the past eleven years.
People see fewer and fewer stars in the night sky worldwide. The cause is probably light pollution in the evening and night hours, which increases by seven to ten percent per year. This rate of change is greater than satellite measurements of artificial light missions on Earth suggested. This is the finding of a study in the science magazine, carried out by a research group led by Dr. Christopher Kyba from the German GeoForschungsZentrum GFZ and the Ruhr University Bochum with researchers from the GFZ and the NOIRLab of the US National Science Foundation. As part of the Citizen Science project "Globe at Night", they evaluated more than 50,000 observations with the naked eye of civil scientists around the world from 2011 to 2022. The study also shows that the Citizen Science data are an important addition to previous measurement methods.