Rocket/Payload: An Atlas V 401 will launch the WorldView-3 for Digital Globe. The United Launch Alliance Atlas V is provided by Lockheed Martin Commercial Launch Services.
Date/Site/Launch Time: Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2014, from Space Launch Complex-3 at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. The 15-minute launch window opens at 11:30 a.m. PDT.
Viewing the Launch by Webcast: The live webcast will begin at 11:10 a.m. PDT.
Mission Description: The live webcast will begin at 11:10 a.m. PDT. Mission Description: WorldView-3 will enhance DigitalGlobe’s industry-leading constellation and will further support customers across a variety of industries, such as agriculture, mining, and oil and gas.
Quelle: ULA
.
Update: 10.08.2014
.
Industry-leading satellite to be launched Wednesday from VAFB
Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. in Boulder, Colo. work on the WorldView-3, the next generation commercial remote-sensing SATELLITE being built for DigitalGlobe last year.
.
A commercial SATELLITE that is the most advanced of its kind is slated to launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base aboard an Atlas 5 rocket Wednesday morning.
The launch, which has a 15-minute window opening at 11:29 a.m., will send a WorldView-3 satellite into orbit. The satellite, which was built by DigitalGlobe, will the first multipayload, super-spectral, high-resolution commercial satellite sent into space. It will allow DigitalGlobe to support its customers across a variety of industries, including agriculture, mining, and oil and GAS.
The United Launch Alliance-built rocket that will carry the SATELLITE will take off from VAFB’s Space Launch Complex-3. The 30th Space Wing at VAFB will be responsible for range safety and launch operations.
“The entire 30th Space Wing team of military, government civilians, and contractors are ALLhonored to launch the first Atlas V commercial mission from Vandenberg AFB,” said Col. Marc Del Rosario, 30th Operations Group commander and the launch decision authority. “The team's planning and behind-the-scenes hard work with United Launch Alliance, Lockheed Martin, and the Federal Aviation Administration are all integral to provide safe launch operations on the Western Range.”
The WoldView-3 satellite is expected to mark the next evolution in commercial satellite imaging.
According to a post on a DigitalGlobe blog, the WorldView-3 “will be able to provide 31 centimeter resolution from 617 kilometers away. For perspective, that is the same as the distance between Southern California’s Hollywood sign and the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. If the imagery were located at the Hollywood sign, users would be able to count all of the people on the Golden Gate Bridge.”
The satellite will also reportedly, thanks to its spectral bands, be able to relay images through obstructions like CLOUDS or smoke and will be useful for a range of applications, such as disaster preparedness and response, soil and geological analysis and monitoring the environment.
Quelle: LompocRecord
.
Update: 11.08.2014
.
WorldView-3 Mission to Provide Unprecedented Commercial Earth Imagery
From early 2015, WorldView-3 will provide the finest resolution ever attained by commercial Earth-imaging satellites outside the military.
.
A few weeks ago, the U.S. Department of Commerce gave permission for DigitalGlobe—the Longmont, Colo.-based provider of commercial space imagery and geospatial content—to collect and sell Earth imagery at resolutions NEVER before allowable under U.S. law. On 11 June, DigitalGlobe was permitted to sell images from its network of satellites at resolutions as fine as 16 inches (40 cm) panchromatic, far higher than the 20 inches (50 cm) previously permitted. On Wednesday, 13 August, when the WorldView-3 satellite is launched into orbit from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., it will lay the groundwork to increase that resolution capability even further. From early 2015, DigitalGlobe will be able to sell geospatial imagery at resolutions never previously obtainable outside the military: as high as 10 inches (25 cm) panchromatic.
The implications are expected to be significant in their scope. As demonstrated in comparative aerial images of the California Academy of Sciences, courtesy of MapBox imagery specialist Charlie Lloyd, an increase from 20 inches (50 cm) to 16 inches (40 cm) from low orbit allows for the greater identification of features such as individual shrubs, the colors of people’s shirts and the reading of smaller road markings. Six months after WorldView-3 is delivered by a United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V rocket into a Sun-synchronous orbit of about 383 miles (617 km) above Earth, it will be in a position to push that imaging envelope yet further to 10 inches (25 cm) panchromatic and 3.3 feet (1 meter) multispectral resolution.
Launch of the Atlas V—which will fly in its “401” configuration, numerically designated to describe a 13-foot-diameter (4-meter) payload fairing, no strap-on rocket boosters and a single-engine Centaur upper stage—is presently targeted to occur from Vandenberg’s Space Launch Complex (SLC)-3E at the start of a 15-minute “WINDOW”, which opens at 11:30 a.m. PDT Wednesday. This pad was most recently employed for the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP)-19 mission in April 2014 and has supported dozens of launches since July 1961. According to ULA’s Twitter feed, weather conditions are expected to be 60-percent favorable.
At the time of writing, the impending milestone for the 196-foot-tall (60-meter) Atlas V is an approximately 35-minute rollout from the Vertical Integration Facility (VIF) to the SLC-3E pad surface. This will be followed by a flurry of activity to establish pad connections, perform pneumatic and other checks and verify the performance of the Atlas’ flight control systems. The vehicle will undergo extensive testing of its ground commanding and communications systems and its fuel lines will be purged with inert gaseous nitrogen, ahead of loading its propellants: a mixture of liquid oxygen and a highly REFINED form of rocket-grade kerosene, known as “RP-1”. About an hour before the opening of Wednesday morning’s window, the propellant tanks will be full and liquid oxygen will transition to a “topping” mode, being continuously replenished until near launch time.
After a final poll of the status of all stations, the Launch Director will authorize a “Go for Launch” at the last scheduled hold point at T-4 minutes and the so-called “Terminal Count” will get underway. Under its auspices, the Atlas V’s autosequencer will assume primary command of all vehicle critical functions through liftoff. Liquid oxygen replenishment will come to an end, the fuel and oxidizer VALVES will be closed for flight and propellant tanks will be verified at Flight Pressure.
At T-5 seconds, sound-suppressing water will flood across the SLC-3E pad surface and into the flame trench, in order to minimize reflected energy and acoustic waves at the instant of liftoff. The ignition sequence of the Atlas V’s SINGLE, Russian-built RD-180 engine will commence at T-2.7 seconds, punching out 860,000 pounds (390,000 kg) of thrust, and the vehicle will be committed to flight at 11:30 a.m. PDT. The rocket, whose thrust-to-weight ratio is only 1:16, will lumber off the pad at T+1.1 seconds and climb vertically for the first 16 seconds of the mission. At this stage, the Centaur avionics will command a pitch, roll and yaw program maneuver to actively guide the stack onto the proper flight azimuth to insert the WorldView-3 satellite into its Sun-synchronous orbit of 383 miles (617 km).
About four minutes into the FLIGHT, the RD-180 engine will be shut down and the 41-foot-long (12.4-meter) Centaur and attached WorldView-3 payload will be detached from the rapidly ascending vehicle. The next phase of the flight will incorporate a single “burn” of the Centaur’s 22,300-pound (10,100 kg) RL-10A liquid oxygen/hydrogen engine to establish the satellite in its correct orbit. During this period, the two-piece (or “bisector”) payload fairing will be jettisoned, exposing WorldView-3 to the space environment for the first time, and the satellite will be released into free flight about 19 minutes after launch.
Headquartered in Longmont, Colo., DigitalGlobe was founded in 1992 as WorldView Imaging Corp. by Dr. Walter Scott—who today serves as the company’s executive vice president and chief technical officer—and received the first high-resolution commercial remote sensing satellite license in 1993, under the provisions of the 1992 Land Remote Sensing Policy Act. Two years later, it was renamed EarthWatch, Inc., merging WorldView with the commercial remote sensing operation of the major defense and space CONTRACTOR Ball Aerospace, also based in Colorado. The license from the U.S. Department of Commerce enabled the construction by Ball of the Early Bird-1 satellite, which was delivered into orbit atop a Start-1 booster from the Svobodny Cosmodrome in Russia’s Far East in December 1997. Its imaging payload was designed to deliver a panchromatic resolution of just 9.8 feet (3 meters) and a multispectral resolution of 49 feet (15 meters), but a power system failure caused the satellite to lose communications capability after just four days in flight.
.
Three years later, in November 2000, EarthWatch’s first QuickBird satellite—again built by Ball Aerospace and expected to deliver a panchromatic resolution as fine as 24 inches (60 cm) and a multispectral resolution of 8 feet (2.4 meters)—was lost following a launch failure out of the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northern Russia. Success was finally achieved in October 2001, when a Delta II booster roared aloft from Vandenberg Air Force Base and delivered the replacement QuickBird-2 satellite into an ORBIT of 280 miles (450 km). Still in orbit today, QuickBird-2’s resolution produced a level of detail which enabled it to image buildings and other infrastructure at ground level. By the time of QuickBird-2’s launch, EarthWatch, Inc., had been renamed DigitalGlobe.
QuickBird-2 formed the initial element of a three-satellite complement. The second member of this constellation was WorldView-1, part-financed by the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), and was delivered into a 300-mile-high (490 km) orbit by ULA atop a Delta II rocket from Vandenberg in September 2007. Its panchromatic camera was capable of a resolution of 20 inches (50 cm), which made it the most powerful commercial imaging satellite of its time. Two years later, in October 2009, WorldView-2 was transported into an orbit of 480 miles (770 km), again atop a Delta II and again from Vandenberg, with the capability to achieve a panchromatic resolution of 18 inches (46 cm) and an eight-band multispectral resolution of 72 inches (184 cm). Both WorldView satellites are capable of revisiting the same place on Earth every 1.1 days.
Several months after the launch of WorldView-2, DigitalGlobe contracted to build a third satellite and in August 2010 Exelis, Inc.—a global aerospace, defense, information and services organization, based in McLean, Va.—was selected to develop its imaging payload. This initially consisted of a combination of panchromatic and Visible-Near-Infrared (VNIR) sensors, but was later expanded to include Short-Wave Infrared (SWIR), in order to ACCOMMODATE more robust capability needs. In September 2013, Exelis delivered this “superspectral” TELESCOPE, sensor and SWIR system for WorldView-3. Then, in January 2014, Ball Aerospace completed integration of the payload into the satellite and executed a series of system-level performance tests, thermal VACUUM tests and environmental tests.
Physically, WorldView-3 closely resembles its immediate predecessor, WorldView-2, although it does boast a number of sensor enhancements, which have offered greater savings in terms of cost, risk reduction and faster delivery of imagery to customers. Again built and integrated by Ball, the 6,200-pound (2,800 kg) satellite stands an impressive 18.7 feet (5.7 meters) tall and 8 feet (2.5 meters) in diameter, with a span of 23 feet (7.1 meters) across its two deployed SOLAR array “wings”. These arrays will provide the three-axis-stabilized WorldView-3 with up to 3.1 kilowatts of electrical power, whilst its system of advanced Control Moment Gyroscopes (CMGs) will allow it to be reoriented over a desired imaging location in just 4-5 seconds, as opposed to the 30-45 seconds needed by traditional reaction wheels. The whole satellite is based upon the Ball Configurable Platform (BCP)-5000 spacecraft “bus” and can support the next generation of optical and Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) payloads. With a design life of at least 7.5 years, WorldView-3 may remain operational for more than a decade.
“Our experience building spacecraft for DigitalGlobe has allowed for quick progress on WorldView-3,” said Cary Ludtke, vice president and GENERAL MANAGER of Ball Aerospace’s Operational Space business unit, quoted by Space Daily. “WorldView-3 will be a highly capable spacecraft based on a low risk design with proven results. We’re eager for it to join DigitalGlobe’s growing constellation.”
Yet it is the imaging capability of the satellite which has drawn most attention. For starters, WorldView-3’s orbit of 383 miles (617 km) is lower in altitude than its predecessors, roughly equivalent to the distance between Southern California’s Hollywood sign and the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco. “If the imagery were located at the Hollywood sign,” DigitalGlobe noted on its blog, “users would be able to count all of the people on the Golden Gate Bridge.” From this low altitude, the satellite will initially provide panchromatic and multispectral resolutions of 12.2 inches (31 cm) and 4 feet (1.24 meters)—expandable to 10 inches (25 cm) and 3.3 feet (1 meter), respectively, from early 2015—together with a SWIR resolution of 12.1 feet (3.7 meters). This is significantly finer than the 20 inches (50 cm) for panchromatic, 6.6 feet (2 meters) for multispectral and 24.6 feet (7.5 meters) for SWIR permitted under U.S. law prior to June 2014. The result is that the WorldView-3 satellite will offer “an unprecedented level of ability and opportunity”. It will also revisit the same ground sites at least once daily and can cover 260,000 square miles (680,000 square km) in every 24-hour period.
Commenting on the relaxation of imaging regulations by the U.S. government, MapBox imagery specialist Charlie Lloyd noted a steady shift from the post-Cold War mindset of strictly controlling access to commercial imagery. “If tight resolution limits made sense two decades ago, they don’t anymore,” he explained, “and regulators are changing with the times. The second is that this isn’t just about San Francisco, New York City, PARIS and other metropolises. Many of them already have satisfactory aerial imagery. This is about having ultra-high-res imagery and especially series of ultra-high-res imagery, over time, of anywhere in the world.”
“We are very pleased and appreciative that the U.S. Department of Commerce, under the leadership of Secretary Penny Pritzker, with support from the U.S. Departments of Defense and State and the Intelligence Community, has made this forward-leaning change to our nation’s policy that will fuel innovation, create new high-tech jobs, and advance the nation’s commanding lead in this strategically important industry,” said Jeffrey R. Tarr, DigitalGlobe’s chief executive officer. “Our customers will immediately realize the benefits of this updated regulation, as for the first time, we will be able to make our very best imagery available to the commercial market. As a result of this policy update and the forthcoming addition of WorldView-3 to our constellation, DigitalGlobe will further differentiate itself from foreign competition and expand our addressable market.”
In addition to its panchromatic and multispectral sensors, the satellite also features DigitalGlobe’s first atmospheric sounder. The 12-band CLOUD, Aerosol, Water Vapor, Ice and Snow (CAVIS) instrument, built by Ball Aerospace, will allow WorldView-3 to gather data based upon ground reflectance characteristics, enabling it to correct its images for atmospheric effects, such as haze, soot, dust and other contaminants. The CAVIS instrument will have a resolving power of about 100 feet (30 meters) and, in terms of its design and development, can trace its ancestry back to the Operational Land Imager (OLI) aboard NASA’s Landsat-8 spacecraft, launched in February 2013. Together with the atmospherically compensated capability of CAVIS, and coverage across no fewer than 16 spectral bands, WorldView-3 will offer important insights in various agricultural processes, such as crop-mapping, as well as GAS and oil site selection and exploration and mining applications. Mapping, land classifications, disaster preparedness and response, soil and vegetation analysis, geology uses, environmental monitoring and coastal applications will also be possible through the satellite’s data, according to Craig Oswald, commercial imaging manager of geospatial systems at Exelis.
“With each successive payload developed in partnership with Ball, DigitalGlobe has expanded the range of questions about the surface of the earth that can be answered with high-resolution satellite imaging,” said the company’s founder and chief technical officer, Dr. Walter Scott. “DigitalGlobe prides itself on owning and operating one of the most agile and sophisticated constellations of high-resolution commercial earth imaging satellites in the world, currently capable of collecting over 386 million square miles (1 billion square km) of the highest quality imagery per year. WorldView-3 follows in this pioneering tradition with innovations like CAVIS that continue to enable DigitalGlobe to lead the industry and help our customers see things NEVER before possible.”
Quelle: AS
.
Update: 14.08.2014
.
United Launch Alliance Atlas V Launches WorldView-3 Satellite for DigitalGlobe
Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., (Aug. 13, 2014) – A United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V rocket carrying the WorldView-3 SATELLITE for DigitalGlobe launched at 11:30 a.m. PDT today from Space Launch Complex-3. Lockheed Martin Commercial Launch Services procured the Atlas V for this mission. This is the fourth successful launch in six weeks and the 87th successful mission since ULA was formed in December 2006.
“Congratulations to our commercial mission partners Lockheed Martin Commercial Launch Services and Digital Globe for today’s spectacular launch of the Atlas V carrying the WorldView-3 SATELLITE,” said Jim Sponnick, ULA vice president, Atlas and Delta Programs. “The team’s dedication to mission success, one launch at a time, brought us to today’s successful launch, delivering WorldView-3 to provide the next generation in earth imaging capabilities for DigitalGlobe.”
This mission was launched aboard an Atlas V 401 configuration vehicle, which includes a 4-meter-diameter payload fairing. The Atlas booster for this mission was powered by the RD AMROSS RD-180 engine, and the Centaur upper stage was powered by a SINGLE Aerojet Rocketdyne RL10A engine.
“This launch marks ULA’s tenth successful launch of fifteen planned this year,” said Sponnick. “The ULA team remains focused mission success and on-time deliveries for our customer’s most valuable payloads.”
WorldView-3 is the first multi-payload super-spectral, high resolution commercial SATELLITE for earth observations and advanced geospatial solutions. This high spatial resolution multispectral satellite imagery is used for civil government mapping, land use planning, disaster relief, exploration, defense, intelligence, visualization and simulation environments.
ULA's next launch is the Atlas V CLIO mission for the U.S. government from Space Launch Complex-41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida.
With more than a century of combined heritage, United Launch Alliance is the nation’s most experienced and reliable launch service provider. ULA has successfully delivered more than 80 satellites to orbit that provide critical capabilities for troops in the field, aid meteorologists in tracking severe weather, enable personal device-based GPS navigation and unlock the mysteries of our SOLAR SYSTEM. ULA – Bringing rocket science down to Earth.