- Apr. 9 • After 35 years and
2 million images of the planet’s surface – and
two orbiting satellites with failing instruments and scant fuel
reserves – the
Landsat Earth observation program is getting a new satellite
and a new, more stable, mission plan.
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- The Landsat satellites have produced data that scientists around the
world use to monitor crops, assess water quality, map coral reefs,
manage coastal zones and transportation systems, plan land use, manage
emergencies and disasters, and carry out many other activities. (See
related article.)
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- The newest satellite, scheduled to launch in 2011, is called the Landsat
Data Continuity Mission. NASA is responsible for the space segment,
which includes designing and building the satellite and the remote-sensing
instrument, providing launch services, and testing the satellite
once it is in orbit.
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- The U.S. Department of Interior’s U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is
responsible for the ground segment, which includes a network of ground
receiving stations, a satellite operations facility and archive and image-processing
facilities. After launch and testing, NASA will transfer satellite operations
to USGS.
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- “NASA and USGS are working very hard,” said Ronald Beck, USGS program
information specialist for the Land Remote Sensing Program, “to
make sure there is data continuity.”
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Remote Sensing
- Remote sensing is defined as collecting information about an object
without being in physical contact with the object. Satellites are
common platforms for remote-sensing observations and have been used for
that purpose since the early days of space flight.
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- Satellite sensors acquire images of the Earth and transmit the data
to ground receiving stations worldwide. Once the raw images are
processed and analyzed, they can document changing environmental conditions
like pollution, global climate change, natural resource distribution,
urban growth and more.
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- The first satellite, Sputnik I, was launched in 1957. For the next
15 years, the number of satellites grew, but most satellite imagery
was classified – produced and viewed mainly by government organizations
for military purposes.
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- In 1972, the first civil satellite was launched to collect data about
the Earth's surface and resources. The Earth Resources Technology Satellite,
later renamed Landsat I, developed by NASA, made satellite imagery available
to the public for the first time.
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- Satellite imagery has revolutionized the study of the natural environment
and global hazards, agriculture, energy use, public health and
international policymaking. The number of satellites has increased and
there is a growing number of commercial satellites and imagery vendors.
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Earth System Science
- Some experts say the data derived from Landsat’s images were a
major force that led to the development of the global-scale concept
of earth systems science, which involves studying processes and cycles
among the planet’s atmosphere and water, ice, land and life systems,
over timescales ranging from minutes to eons.
The Earth-observation program has been experimental from the first Landsat
1 satellite, inspired by NASA’s Apollo missions to the moon and
launched in 1972, to the still-orbiting Landsats 5 and 7 – meaning
that each satellite was a project conceived individually with little
consideration for the future.
That approach changed in 2005, when John Marburger, director of the
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, issued a memorandum
on the issue.
“It remains the goal of the U.S. government,” he wrote, “to
transition the Landsat program from a series of independently planned
missions to a sustained operational program,” funded and managed
by the government, an international consortium or a commercial
partnership.
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Filling the data gap
- Landsat satellite’s orbit covers the entire
globe every 16 days, but the satellite acquires images of only
about one-third that area because of limited processing and storage capacity.
It takes one satellite about three months to map the entire globe.
With Landsat 5 and Landsat 7 now in orbit, together they cover the globe
every eight days.
Landsat 5 launched in 1984 and, despite a design life of three years
to five years, continues to operate 23 years later, albeit with
limited capability. Landsat 7, with the same design life, launched in
1999; since 2003, a sensor problem has limited its capability. Both satellites
will run out of fuel in 2010 or 2011, but remote-sensing experts hope
the new satellite will be in orbit before that happens.
“We think we can keep them going until early 2011,” Beck
said. “The realistic problem is, what if the sensors fail this
year? We’ll have to find a short-term replacement, like buying
the data from India, China, France, Japan, other satellite systems,
or U.S. commercial firms.”
Today, in the United States, the Future of Operational Land Imaging
Working Group is leading a multiagency effort to develop a long-term
plan for Landsat.
Members of the working group include the White House Office of Science
and Technology Policy, NASA, USGS, the National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration, and the departments of State, Energy, Agriculture,
Transportation and Defense.
A report from the working group is due out in the next few months on
how to handle the next generation of Landsat satellites and which
agency should be in charge of land imaging for the U.S. government.
Additional information is available on the Future of Land Imaging Web
site, sponsored by the Executive Office of the President.
(USINFO is produced by the Bureau of International Information Programs,
U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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