07 March 2013
India: The Indian Space Research Organisation is planning to build a
remote sensing satellite, Cartosat-3, capable of taking images of the
earth with a resolution of 0.25 metres.
Currently, GeoEye-1
produces the highest resolution earth images taken by a commercial
satellite. The American spacecraft, launched in September 2008, is
capable of taking panchromatic images with 0.41 metre resolution.
WorldView-2, another satellite operated by the same company,
DigitalGlobe, offers a best resolution of 0.46 metres. However, in
accordance with U.S. regulations, commercially released images from
these satellites are degraded to 0.5 metre resolution.
DigitalGlobe
plans to launch WorldView-3 next year, which will supply images with a
resolution of 0.31 metres. Cartosat-3’s camera would better that
performance. In the words of one expert, this satellite's images could
allow a scooter to be distinguished from a car.
In the ‘Notes on
Demands for Grants, 2013-2014’ from the Department of Space, which forms
part of the budget documents presented to Parliament recently,
Cartosat-3 figures as a separate item with an allocation of Rs. 10
crores. “Cartosat-3 is an advanced remote sensing satellite with
enhanced resolution of 0.25 metre for cartographic applications and
high-resolution mapping,” the document said.
IN 1988, ISRO
launched India’s first operational remote-sensing satellite, IRS-1A. The
best resolution its cameras could provide was about 36 metres. Seven
years later, IRS-1C went into space, with a panchromatic camera that had
a resolution of 5.8 metres. It supplied the highest resolution images
available from any civilian satellite in the world till Ikonos, an
American satellite launched in 1999, began taking images with better
than one-metre resolution. India launched the Technology Experiment
Satellite in 2001, followed some years later by the Cartosat-2 series of
satellites that could take images with 0.8 metre resolution.
Source: http://www.geospatialworld.net
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