Pléiades mission countdown.
Episode 4 :
Pléiades ground segment qualification at Spot Image
| Technical qualification | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Integration of the ground segment at Spot Image began in October 2008. The main civil receiving station for the Pléiades system houses a receiving antenna and extensive computing equipment. This station, which supports data reception, satellite tasking and imaging, will undergo technical qualification tests in February 2010. Acceptance testing of the second civil receiving station in Kiruna, Sweden, will be signed off in March.
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Integration by an industry consortium | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Operational qualification | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Operational qualification will get underway in March, once technical qualification is complete. This phase has two aims:
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Staff training | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Pléiades at a glance | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Pleiades is a new generation of wide-swath (20 km), very-high-resolution (50 cm) Earth-imaging satellites. Initiated in 2001, the dual-use Pleiades programme comprises two 1,000-kg satellites phased in the same orbit to provide daily revisits of any point on the globe. Equipped with innovative, latest-generation space technologies like fibre-optic gyros and control moment gyros, Pleiades 1 (PHR1A) and Pleiades 2 (PHR2A) offer great roll and yaw agility. They can acquire imagery anywhere within an 800-km ground strip in less than 25 seconds with a location accuracy better than 3 metres. |
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