The proposed GDE System management plan is to
license regional franchise affiliates which are linked
with imagery reception sites. These regional partners
will maintain local imagery archives and provide value-
added image product and distribution capabilities.
The primary processing center and master archive will
be managed by GDE in the USA. Their plan is to
provide Internet accessibility and two-day delivery
from time of image acquisition. The product suite
plan is to provide system corrected images; geometric
corrected images; monoscopic scenes tailored to
customer needs; stereo image pairs; DTM's;
orthophoto and special image products; and volume
discounted pricing.
RESOURCE 21
Resource 21 is a commercial remote sensing
information systems and services company which has
obtained a commercial license to develop and operate
a constellation of ten meter resolution multispectral
satellites for initial operational capability in the early
months of 1999. Resource 21 was created in 1994 by
the Institute of Technology Development (ITD) based
on four years of market testing of an aircraft-based
remote sensing product. Resource 21 is now a
coalition of six business partners which are designing
their system to support the growing "precision
farming" industry. Dr. Herb Satterlee is President of
Resource 21 which has offices in Gulfport, Mississippi
and Denver, Colorado.
Precision farming is the determination of precise field
conditions for managing the dispensation of precise
nutrients to precise locations for improvement of crop
productivity.
In October 1996, Resource 21 will make a go-ahead
decision to begin construction of five satellites. Its
initial constellation will have four satellites in orbit by
early 1999. The four satellites will be placed in exactly
the same orbital plane, but with tightly controlled
phasing. The phasing will result in two satellites in
each of two ground tracks that repeat every seven
days. Each of the two satellites within a particular
ground track revisit, with the same access geometry,
the same ground sites every third or fourth day. This
strategy results in twice weekly "nadir" access revisits
of all sites.
The multispectral, pushbroom sensor called "M10" is
nominally designed for nadir collection of 205 km
swaths, but it has adjustable line rates to
accommodate off-nadir collection. The spacecraft bus
can roll or tilt the sensor allowing stereo imaging and
frequency of site revisits up to three times daily! The
spatial resolution of the MS system is 10m (1/40th
acre) nominally designed to provide precise monitoring
of V4 acre sites for 180 acre or larger farms. Precision
digital processing of the MS bands (e.g. band ratio
comparisons) provides information about the temporal
condition of crops and soils for frequent remote
monitoring of localized variations in site conditions
such as; moisture content, pest and weed infestations,
and nutrient needs.
With the use of ground control points, it is projected
that spatial accuracies of better than 5 m absolute and
1 m relative can be provided. A site/region specific
GIS will maintain site condition history. This potent
combination of information allows timely allocation of
water, fertilizer, pesticides, etc. thereby vastly
increasing site productivity. The system is ideally
suited for agricultural sites which use farm equipment
instrumented with GPS. A pilot program using
airborne MS sensors, conducted since 1991, includes
more than 180 "beta" sites in six states to demonstrate
the effectiveness of approach. Future efforts to
expand into non-agricultural markets are under
consideration.
Table 8 provides a summary of the Resource 21
technical and operational characteristics. Resource 21
is offering: Products - data, information, and tools;
Services - custom processing, special studies, training,
and delivery; and Ordering Options - subscriptions,
archive retrievals, standard information products,
custom area quantity and shapes, custom and standard
formats. The ground processing system is designed to
provide twice weekly information products to
subscribing customers within two to six hours after
image acquisition! Typical costs are $6 to 15 per acre
cost to the farmer, wherein the price is set per value
per crop grower type.
OTHER PROPOSED SYSTEMS
Although system plans and technical specifications are
not available at this time, another commercial remote
sensing satellite system is under development by the
Geophysical & Environmental Research Corp. (GER)
of Millbrook, New York. The GER Earth Resource
Observation System "GEROS" will include a
constellation of six simultaneous satellites each
carrying a 10m MS and < 10m pan digital sensor.
GEROS is being developed for the agricultural market
with initial emphasis for precision farming.
Other non-USA commercial digital Earth observing
systems have been under consideration in several
countries such as South Africa, Israel, and Russia.
However, except for the Greensat Program of South
Africa, most are being funded by governments rather
than totally funded by private organizations.
278
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B4. Vienna 1996
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