|
NASAs
EARTH OBSERVING TECHNOLOGY SATELLITE PROVES A SUCCESS
 |

|
| | | Image
1 | |
|
The
new Earth monitoring technology aboard NASAs Earth-Observing 1 (EO-1) satellite
has proven itself invaluable in its clarity and ability to more accurately identify
objects on the Earths surface, and will become part of a long-term Earth
monitoring mission on the next Landsat satellite. The
EO-1 satellite was launched to test new technology over a short time frame, and
confirm that it was suitable for a long term satellite mission, such as the next
generation of Landsat satellites. The purpose of the mission was also aimed at
lowering the costs and increasing the performances of future Earth science missions. "EO-1
has been a very successful mission. It has remained fully functional since launch
and has now produced over four times the volume of imagery originally expected,"said
Bryant Cramer, EO-1 Implementation Manager at NASAs Goddard Space Flight
Center, Greenbelt, Md.
 |

|
| | | Image
2 | | | Two
instruments in particular, Hyperion, the worlds only hyperspectral satellite
sensor utilizing 220-bands (of the spectrum) at approximately 30-meter (98.4 ft.)
spatial resolution and the Advanced Land Imager (ALI), a lightweight, high performance,
multi-spectral sensor have already proven invaluable in monitoring the Earths
surfaces. ALI has a panchromatic sharpening band that produces 10-meter (32.8
ft.) imagery. After
a one-year test aboard EO-1, ALIs proven effectiveness in image clarity
supersedes the current ETM+ Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus on-board the Landsat
satellites. ALI and Hyperion are providing space-qualified new technologies as
potential models for the next generation Landsat and other land imaging satellites. Earth
Observing-1, launched on November 21, 2000, is the first satellite in NASA's New
Millennium Program Earth Observing series. The EO missions will develop and validate
instruments and technologies for space-based Earth observations with unique spatial,
spectral and temporal characteristics not previously available.
 |

|
| | | Image
3 | | | EO-1's
primary focus is to develop and test a set of advanced technology land imaging
instruments. However, many other key instruments and technologies are part of
the mission and will have wide ranging applications to future land imaging missions
in particular and future satellites in general. NASA
and U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) are partners on this mission. NASA and USGS
scientists believe that the datasets will prove valuable to global land cover
studies, ecosystem monitoring, mineral and petroleum prospecting, and agricultural
crop assessment, among other potential applications. Image data products are now
distributed by USGS EROS Data Center in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
The
Hyperion instrument has proven very useful in a number of applications such as
forestry. Previous capabilities from the Landsat satellite enabled researchers
to identify vegetation as hardwood, softwood, and grasslands. The Hyperion instrument,
using many of its 220 bands from the spectrum, enables scientists to distinguish
the types of trees, from Red Pine to Red Oak, and the types of environments including
hardwood bogs, mixed conifers and spruce swamplands. This type of data is very
important to land managers.
 |

|
| | | Image
4 | | | The
Hyperion data can also indicate healthy grasslands and dormant vegetation, and
can distinguish riverbeds from brush, paved and dirt road surfaces, and planted
areas, down to the details of what type of crop is growing. This kind of data
is especially useful for farmers who need to fertilize certain crops. Some
of the results from the ALI technology include a sharp image of the path of the
deadly La Plata, Maryland Tornado from May of 2002. An improvement of clarity
in images over local areas was also seen in an image of Sutton, Alaska taken by
the Landsat-7 ETM+ and the ALI, where the ALI image proved to be much sharper.
The ALI instrument also provided the sharpest images of Las Vegas at night, clearly
depicting the casino lights that lined a main street.
 |

|
| | | Image
5 | | | Results
from the EO-1 mission will be presented today at the 2002 International Geoscience
and Remote Sensing Symposium at the Westin Harbour Castle Hotel and Conference
Center, Toronto, Canada. The session Overview of the Earth Observing System-1
Satellite, will be presented by Dr. Stephen Ungar of NASA Goddard. NASA-TV
will air video on this story today at 12 noon, 3 p.m., 6 p.m., 9 p.m., and midnight.
NASA-TV can be found at AMC-2 (formerly GE-2) transponder 9C, C Band, 85 degrees
west longitude, vertical polarization 3880.0 mHz, audio at 6.8 mHz. Back
to Top |