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EARTH OBSERVATION
ESA's oldest Earth-observer images Delhi airport
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) May 22, 2020

This 25 sq. km HRC image was acquired on 7 May 2020.

Plentiful parked airliners at Indira Gandhi International Airport in New Delhi, usually the busiest airport in India until the COVID-19 pandemic, as seen by ESA's oldest operational Earth observation mission, Proba-1.

The cubic-metre-sized satellite has been in orbit for more than 18 years. It left Earth from India: Proba-1 was launched from the country's Satish Dhawan Space Centre by Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle on 22 October 2001.

The first in ESA's family of 'Project for On-Board Autonomy' missions, Proba-1 began life as a technology demonstration satellite, subsequently becoming an Earth observation mission. Its main hyperspectral Compact High Resolution Imaging Spectrometer is accompanied by the monochromatic High Resolution Camera, which took the 5-m spatial resolution image shown here.

Overseen from ESA's ESEC-Redu centre in Belgium, the highly-automated Proba-1 introduced various then-novel but now mainstream technologies to space, including lithium ion batteries, gallium arsenide solar panels, the use of startrackers for gyro-free attitude control and ESA-developed ERC-32 microprocessors running its flight computer.

Proba-1 continues to deliver imagery to scientific teams around the globe, while also providing useful data on the longevity of space systems and components.

Proba-1 was followed by the Sun-observing Proba-2 in 2009 and vegetation-tracking Proba-V in 2013, with the double-satellite Proba-3 to demonstrate precision formation flying while studying the Sun's corona planned for launch in 2022.

This 25 sq. km HRC image was acquired on 7 May 2020.


Related Links
Proba-1 at ESA
Earth Observation News - Suppiliers, Technology and Application


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EARTH OBSERVATION
Tiny NASA satellite captures first image of clouds and aerosols
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 15, 2020
The Hyper-Angular Rainbow Polarimeter (HARP) CubeSat achieved "first light" on April 16. The tiny satellite sent back its very first image over Europe with bright splashes of colors defining clouds and aerosols, which are tiny particles in the atmosphere. HARP's measurements help us better understand how clouds and aerosols impact weather, climate and air quality. HARP filters light into four wavelengths and uses a prism to rotate that light to three polarization angles. Just as polarized sunglass ... read more

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