One year in orbit for first DMC satellite - AlSAT-1January 15, 2004AlSAT-1, the first satellite launched for the international Disaster Monitoring Constellation (DMC), has completed one year of orbital operations. The satellite, built under a know-how transfer programme at Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL), was launched on 28 November 2002 for Centre Nationale Techniques Spatiales in Algeria. The first 12-months of satellite operations has seen the successful exploitation of imagery by a wide variety of end users within Algeria, with demand far exceeding expectations. For the first time, engineers at CNTS were unable to take their annual leave month of August, so high was the level of imaging requests from the Algerian forest services in their efforts to estimate burn scars from recent fires. Previously, the only way to access this information was to send teams into remote and often difficult to reach areas of the country. Subsequent ground verification by the forestry services has demonstrated the accuracy of the satellite's remote sensing data. Imagery from AlSAT-1 has also been used for soil and land classification, watershed and other hydrological mapping. By laying LANDSAT data over digital elevation models and creating Geographical Information Systems (GIS) for managing hydrological resources, it has been concluded that AlSAT-1 data is virtually indistinguishable from that provided by LANDSAT. The Algerian Government is currently using data from the satellite to counter the threat of locust plagues. With the onset of rain there are serious problems in monitoring breeding areas of desert locusts. AlSAT-1 imagery has highlighted new flushes of vegetation across a very wide area, assisting teams on the ground to target these potential breeding grounds using topographical information available from the DMC satellites. Imagery has also been used for identifying iron mineralisation. AlSAT-1 was joined in orbit in September by a further three satellites: NigeriaSat-1 for the Nigerian Space Agency, BILSAT-1 for Tubitak-Bilten in Turkey and the UK-DMC. In 2005 a fifth satellite, for China, will be launched into the constellation. The DMC is an innovative concept designed by SSTL, which brings together a unique partnership of nations and provides a sustainable space programme for nations who might otherwise be unable to afford their own independent space capability. As collaborative partners these countries are able to reap the benefits of sharing a powerful resource - not just one satellite, but five. Each partner is able to operate completely independently, but may also share unused capacity with other partners to gain the benefit of daily Earth imaging. They also enjoy greater flexibility in down-linking data through other ground stations around the world when required. The DMC's Earth imaging data is already attracting considerable commercial interest that will lead to the generation of income from each satellite - an important element of any sustainable space programme. | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
Related Aging News Articles Gender Differences And Heart Disease Women may respond less favorably than men to cardiovascular disease (CV) drug-treatments for enlarged heart, according to NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center physician-scientists. Weekends slow weight loss, researchers find Saturday can be the worst enemy for our waistlines, according to researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Major rise in Caesarean sections linked to impaired womb function with age Delaying childbirth has substantially contributed to recent rises in caesarean section rates, according to a paper published this week by scientists at Cambridge University. Researchers link early stem cell mutation to autism In a breakthrough scientific study published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, scientists at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research have shown that neural stem cell development may be linked to Autism. Cancer 'cure' in mice to be tested in humans Scientists at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center are about to embark on a human trial to test whether a new cancer treatment will be as effective at eradicating cancer in humans as it has proven to be in mice. The good and the bad of a potential Alzheimer's target Research in fruit flies has shown that enhancing the production of a protein called neprilysin can reduce the formation of plaques and neuron death associated with Alzheimer's, at the expense of reducing the flies' lifespan. Animal study suggests inadequate sleep may exacerbate cellular aging in the elderly Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have shown that the unfolded protein response, which is a reaction to stress induced by sleep deprivation, is impaired in the brains of old mice. Late-life remarriage: Stepfamilies make caring more complex Late-life remarriage complicates caring for an ailing spouse, according to a University of Michigan researcher who is conducting one of the first known studies to focus on the challenges facing older remarried caregivers-a growing segment of the older U.S. population. Scientists find how neural activity spurs blood flow in the brain New research from Harvard University neuroscientists has pinpointed exactly how neural activity boosts blood flow to the brain. The finding has important implications for our understanding of common brain imaging techniques such as fMRI, which uses blood flow in the brain as a proxy for neural activity. Umbilical cord blood cell transplants may help ALS patients A study at the University of South Florida has shown that transplants of mononuclear human umbilical cord blood (MNChUCB) cells may help patients suffering from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. More Aging News Articles |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||