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EARTH OBSERVATION
SEOSAT-Ingenio ready for shipment to Kourou
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Jun 16, 2020

SEOSAT-Ingenio in the cleanroom at Airbus in Spain. The mission will provide high-resolution multispectral images of the environment for applications such as cartography, monitoring land use, urban management, water management, risk management and security. While SEOSAT-Ingenio is a Spanish national mission, it has resulted thanks to an international collaborative effort. The mission is funded by Spain's Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology (CDTI) but developed and managed by ESA in the context of the European Earth Observation Architecture.

The Spanish high-resolution land imaging mission, known as SEOSAT-Ingenio, is currently at the premises of Airbus in Madrid, Spain and is ready to be packed and shipped to Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana - following the mission's latest successful tests and final technical review. This is another significant milestone in preparing the Earth observation satellite's ride into orbit on a Vega rocket.

Thanks to the satellite era, we are better placed to understand and monitor the complexities of our planet, particularly with respect to global change. As the use of data from Earth observation satellites continues to be more commonplace, so does the demand for increasingly detailed imagery.

High-resolution images of Earth are now deemed an essential commodity at the core of a wide range of scientific, commercial and governmental applications. By imaging Earth's land in remarkable detail, SEOSAT-Ingenio is ready to serve the new digital age.

SEOSAT-Ingenio is based on a state-of-the-art dual camera that can image Earth's land with a resolution of 2.5 m. The mission will benefit society through numerous disciplines such as cartography, agriculture, forestry, urban development and water management.

With its capability to look sideways, it can access any point on Earth within three days, and will be used to help map natural disasters such as floods, wildfires and earthquakes - as well as help with one of humankind's biggest challenges: understanding and responding to climate change.

SEOSAT-Ingenio's latest tests, which took place virtually owing to COVID-19 restrictions, were deemed successful by teams working together across Europe. These recent assessments come after the successful technical review was completed in April.

While SEOSAT-Ingenio is a Spanish national mission, it is the result of an international collaborative effort. The mission is funded by Spain's Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology (CDTI) of the Ministry of Science and Innovation, but developed by ESA in the context of the European Earth Observation Architecture.

Other partners include Airbus Defence and Space, being the prime industrial contractor of the satellite, and SENER and INDRA, responsible for the payload and ground segment.

Information from SEOSAT-Ingenio will be used by different Spanish civil, institutional and government users, but also potentially by other European users in the framework of the European Union's Copernicus programme and the Group on Earth Observations' Global Earth Observation System of Systems.

The target launch date is currently set for 24 August 2020 - to be confirmed by Arianespace.


Related Links
Observing the Earth at ESA
Earth Observation News - Suppiliers, Technology and Application


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EARTH OBSERVATION
Looking up to the stars can reveal what's deep below
Baltimore MD (SPX) Jun 12, 2020
Using a new technique originally designed to explore the cosmos, scientists have unveiled structures deep inside the Earth, paving the way towards a new map revealing what Earth's interior looks like. Similar to the way doctors use ultrasounds to look inside the human body, earth scientists use seismic waves to probe the Earth's interior. However, their task is much harder: they need to wait for an earthquake to record data, and when this happens, it only provides information in a piecemeal manner ... read more

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