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REVIEW OF SATELLITE REMOTE SENSING PROGRAMS*
FREDERICK J. DOYLE, President
International Society for Photogrammetry
and Remote Sensing
ABSTRACT
Satellite remote sensing systems are being developed by several nations.
Landsat-4 was launched by NASA in July 1982 and is providing high quality
data from the Multi Spectral Scanner and the Thematic Mapper. Several
Space Shuttle Missions will have partial remote sensing payloads: syn-
thetic aperture radar, film cameras, and electro-optical sensors. The
USSR operates both film cameras in Salyut-7 and electro optical sensors
on the Meteor spacecraft. France will launch the SPOT satellite with
high resolution electro-optical sensors. The European Space Agency and
Japan will launch systems dedicated to marine observations, followed by
other spacecraft for land observations. India is operating small remote
sensing satellites and Brazil, Netherlands, and Canada are studying
future systems.
Worldwide experience of many individuals and organizations with remote sensing
data acquired from space, primarily Landsat-1, -2, and -3, has demonstrated its
utility for land use classification, agricultural assessment, energy and resource
exploration, and many other applications. On the basis of this favorable expe-
rience several countries are developing new systems for operation in the decade
of the 1980s. This review presents the situation at the beginning of 1983. Only
systems designed for imaging the Earth are included; meteorological satellites
and other types of non-imaging remote sensing satellites are not covered.
Landsat-4
The most significant recent event in satellite remote sensing was the successful
launch of Landsat-4 on 16 July 1982. The spacecraft was launched by the Delta
3920 expendable vehicle into a 705 km altitude, 98.29 inclination sun-synchronous
orbit. As shown in Figure 1, the basic vehicle is the Multi-mission Modular
Spacecraft (MMS), which provides power supply, attitude control, command and data
handling, and on-orbit propulsion. The payload consists of the Multi-Spectral
Scanner (MSS) and the Thematic Mapper (TM). The MSS is essentially the same as
the instrument carried on Landsats -1, -2, and -3, with four Spectral bands, 80m
pixel, and 185 km swath. The TM is a second generation multispectral scanner
having six spectral bands in the visible and short wave infrared wavelengths with
a 30m pixel, and one band in the thermal infrared wavelength with 120m pixel.
The TM swath width is also 185 km. The spacecraft has a solar array for power,
an antenna for use with the Global Positioning System (GPS)**, and a large
steerable antenna for communication with the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite
System (TDRSS)***,
*Extensively revised from earlier version of April 1982.
**The GPS will eventually consist of an array of 18 separate satellites arranged
in six different orbital planes at 20,200 km altitude. By real time processing
of the signals from GPS, it will be possible to determine the position of
Landsat-4 with a precision of about 15 meters in all three coordinates. GPS
should be fully operational in 1988.
***The TDRSS will consist of two communication satellites in geostationary orbits
at 419 and 1719 west longitude and a single ground station at White Sands,
New Mexico. Commands from the ground and data from manned and unmanned space-
craft in low Earth orbit will be transmitted via TDRSS, thus eliminating the
need for the current NASA Spacecraft Tracking and Data Network (STADAN). TDRSS
should be operational by Fall 1983.
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