Landsat 8 Satellite Successfully Launches Into Orbit 28
A user writes "The Landsat Data Continuity Mission is now in orbit, after launching Monday from Vandenberg Air Force Base in Calif. After about three months of testing, the U.S. Geological Survey will take control and the mission, renamed Landsat 8, will extend more than 40 years of global land observations critical to energy and water management, forest monitoring, human and environmental health, urban planning, disaster recovery, and agriculture."
We still need more new observation satellites to avoid losing Earth observing capabilities as the work horses of the NASA/USGS fleet die of old age.
Re:5 years of service (Score:5, Informative)
Its a requirements thing. If the requirement is for 5 years of service then all the parts are life tested for the equivalent of 5 years. If the requirement was for 10 years of service the parts testing would cost a lot more. Because most of the subsystems are redundant even if some subsystems fail at 5 years the mission can continue longer. Generally, spacecraft last a lot longer than the design life anyway. Landsat 5 has been in use almost 29 years. ATS-3 was in use for 34 years. TDRS-1 was in use for 26 years. Nimbus-7 was another one that was in use for way longer than anyone ever imagined.
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Planning for death... (Score:2)
Do these satellites have the ability to deorbit? Or when they die do they become more permanent space junk?
Re:Planning for death... (Score:5, Informative)
Low orbit satellites like this one are deorbited. Either they have to be designed for a controlled reentry into the ocean or be demisable, that is to completely disintegrate on reentry. Designing for dismisability is tough. You have to limit the size of all hard parts, and the harder they are the smaller the maximum size is. Off the top of my head, a titanium part can't be be bigger tham 2cm square, but aluminum can be 10cm square. Composites can be larger still.
The USGS satellites are very important. (Score:5, Insightful)
These satellites are used for water management, agriculture and many other things that are vital infrastructure. As an example, my state uses LandSAT data to estimate water use by using the thermal maps LandSAT produces and from this can make fairly accurate predictions of actual water use and resulting draw down of critical reservoirs.
It's also a huge issue as right now there is going to be a gap of about 2 years when one of the sats dies and before it's replacement gets up and it's going to get worse as more of the aging sats die. This is one of those aspects of government spending that is critical in many ways and will be severely damaged by government spending cuts. The amount of money these programs occupy is miniscule compared against their benefit.
Re:The USGS satellites are very important. (Score:4, Insightful)
While a gap in coverage is a problem, having the replacement in orbit before failure is (arguably) more important for calibration. Without sets of images of the same things at the same times from both satellites, it's impossible to know the exact differences between the older and newer data. For example, the shades of color indicating plant health.
Sure, you have a good idea as to what those differences might be from the designs, but the only real test is to put the satellite into orbit.
and the other planets too (Score:2)
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my state uses LandSAT data to estimate water use .. and from this can make fairly accurate predictions of actual water use and resulting draw down of critical reservoirs.
This sounds really important.
This is one of those aspects of government spending that is critical in many ways and will be severely damaged by government spending cuts. The amount of money these programs occupy is miniscule compared against their benefit.
Let's say, hypothetically that nobody shows up for Treasury auctions anymore except for
ERTS-1 (Score:1)
Playing with tapes from EROS on the Cray/CDC machines at U of Mn in the early 70s. Great fun.
weather.com would launch a 20yr sat for 1/10th the (Score:1)
Then, the Google Earth crew would look at the Google Fiber team and say "if they can offer 700 mbps for $70, what can we do with satellites?" Maybe they'd launch a rocket carrying 50 mini-sats that together provided ten times better coverage than the 1960s style Landsats
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Then companies took it to 700000000 bps, after building the web atop the old gopher-carrying net.
Using lines laid with public dollars, and protected with limited monopolies. Also, often building off research done at public universities, with government grant money.
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The web was not invented by private corporations. Without the special right of way grants, the corporate world wouldn't have been able to do anything with the internet. Without the DARPA work, the internet would closer resemble Tymenet and Compu$erve and yes, you would likely have to pay for it by the minute. There would likely be 3 competing services, all incompatible and with no hope of interconnection. Each would reserve the right to remove any content they didn't like from their servers. YOU wouldn't ha
So Compuserve invented it, arpa dialed up (Score:2)
Hmm, you did mention walled gardens, a phrase normally appl
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No, that's not what he said at all, and that's not what was happening at all. Those of us who were old enough to actually be there remember how the big companies were carving out exclusive territories with the gleeful cooperation of the Baby Bells. In northern Michigan my one choice was AOL unless I was willing to pay per-minute long distance charges ($0.24/minute IIRC) in addition to the per-minute online charges ($0.05/minute). Even after
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Actually, no. Compu$serve et. al. had long stagnated. They were quite expensive. Email started on the ARPANET which predated compuserve. They were indeed competing, but competition failed to create anything like the value and utility that DARPA created by fiat. They were far from first, they were just made available to the general public sooner while ARPANAT was confined to government and universities. Once Internet connectivity was opened to all, it was game over for the expensive slow, tightly metered, a
Um, "workhorse" is one word. (Score:2)
For 2013, Russia has pledged to spend more than 7 times NASA's budget on space.
What is our government doing?