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academics:aerospace:satellite-constellations

Remote Sensing Satellite Constellations

Earth Observation

http://www.phiphase.com/satellite_coverage.htm A general talk about radar and antenna FOV, and some simple geometric analysis. Descriptions may not be 100% correct but very clear and pictorial. For example, some excerpts:

  • Off-Nadir Pointing Field of View Geometry
    • The FoV now projected onto the Earth’s surface is an ellipse rather than a circle as is the case for the Nadir-pointing beam. Such a FoV may be referred to as a Swath, a term usually reserved for Earth Observation sensors e.g. SAR.

Classification

Credit: [1]

Sanad et cl. have gave a detailed summary of remote sensing satellite constellations [1].

Multiple orbits

ICEYE (Aalto University and ESA)

3 satellites x 6 SSOs

X-band SAR

OptiSAR

SSO 10:30am, 450km.
Mid-Inclination Orbit (MIO) ~45º, 450km.

Eight tandem pairs: one X-band and L-band SAR instrument ahead; trailing optical satellite $\approx2$mins behind.

Using onboard processing, it is capable to detect, clasify objects of interest, and then automatically task the optical satellite to take a high-resolution image or video of the selected objects. [1]

DigitalGlobe (Maxar)

WorldVide-Legion is next generation.

2 go to SSOs; 4 go to 45° MIO orbits.

Flock (Platnet Labs)

SkySat (Platnet Labs)

a constellation of sub-meter resolution Earth observation satellites owned by Planet Labs, providing imagery, high-definition video and analytics services

https://directory.eoportal.org/web/eoportal/satellite-missions/s/skysat

Sun-synchronous near-circular orbit, altitude = 600 km, inclination = 97.8º, LTDN (Local Time on Descending Node) = 10:30 hours.

Orbit: Sun-synchronous orbit, altitude = 515 km, inclination = 97.56º.

Orbit: Sun-synchronous orbit, altitude = 695 km, inclination = 98.3º.

Orbit: Sun-synchronous near-circular orbit, altitude of ~500 km, inclination of ~97º.

Orbit: Sun-synchronous circular orbit with an altitude of 575 km, inclination of ~98º, LTDN (Local Time of Descending Node) of 10:30 hours.

https://www.planet.com/products/satellite-imagery/files/1610.06_Spec%20Sheet_Combined_Imagery_Product_Letter_ENGv1.pdf

Single orbit

Pléiades

same phased orbit and are offset at 180° to offer a daily revisit capability over any point on the globe.

The Pléiades also share the same orbital plane as the SPOT 6 and 7, forming a larger constellation with 4 satellites, 90° apart from one another.

SSO, 695 km

Agility for Responsive Tasking
Optimized daily acquisition capacity (taking into account genuine order book, weather constraints, conflicts…) reaching 300,000 km2 per day and per satellite.

查任务规划方法

Uplink Stations
The Pléiades tasking plan are refreshed and uploaded three times per day, allowing for last minute requests and the ability to utilize up-to-the-minute weather forecasts.

https://eoportal.org/web/eoportal/satellite-missions/p/pleiades

Direct Tasking principles

Earth-i

https://earthi.space/

https://earthi.space/constellations/

DMC3/TripleSat Constellation

KOMPSAT series of satellites

SuperView Constellation

The Vivid-i Constellation

A-train (satellite constellation)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A-train_(satellite_constellation)

upload.wikimedia.org_wikipedia_commons_thumb_7_77_a-train_w-time2013_web.jpg_1920px-a-train_w-time2013_web.jpg

SSO 705 km
Inclination 98.14 deg
crosses the equator each day at ~1:30 pm solar time
again on the night side ~1:30 am

OCO-2 (NASA) + GCOM-W1 (JAXA) + Aqua (NASA) + AUra (NASA)

C-train

CloudSat (NASA) + CALIPSO (CNES + NASA)

(retired) RapidEye (Planet Labs)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RapidEye

RapidEye (1998–2012) → RapidEye Blackbridge (2012→2013) → Blackbridge (2013–2014) → Planet Labs acquired and then retired RapidEye (202004xx)

SSO, 630 km, Equator Crossing Time: 11:00 am local time (approximately)\ Global Revisit Time: Daily (off-nadir) / 5.5 days (at nadir)\ Swath Width: 77 km


[1] a, b, c I. Sanad, Z. Vali, and D. G. Michelson, “Statistical Classification of Remote Sensing Satellite Constellations”, 2020 IEEE Aerospace Conference, 2020, pp. 1–15.
academics/aerospace/satellite-constellations.txt · Last modified: 2021/04/19 05:21 by foreverph