Everything about The Landsat totally explained
The
Landsat program is the longest running enterprise for acquisition of imagery of
Earth from space. The first Landsat satellite was launched in
1972; the most recent,
Landsat 7, was launched on
April 15,
1999. The instruments on the Landsat satellites have acquired millions of images. The images, archived in the United States and at Landsat receiving stations around the world, are a unique resource for global change research and applications in
agriculture,
cartography,
geology,
forestry,
regional planning,
surveillance,
education and
national security. Landsat 7 data has eight spectral bands with
spatial resolutions ranging from 15 to 60 meters.
History
Hughes Santa Barbara Research Center initiated design and fabrication of the first three MSS Multi-Spectral-Scanners in the same year man landed on the moon, 1969. The first prototype MSS was completed within nine months by fall of 1970 when it was tested by scanning Half Dome at Yosemite National Park.
The initial centerline for the primary layout of the MSS was drawn by Jim Kodak, the opto-mechanical design engineer who designed the
Pioneer spacecraft optical camera, the first instrument to leave the
solar system.
The program was called the Earth Resources Observation Satellites Program when it was initiated in
1966, but the name was changed to Landsat in 1975. In
1979, Presidential Directive 54 under
President of the United States Jimmy Carter transferred Landsat operations from
NASA to
NOAA, recommended development of long term operational system with four additional satellites beyond Landsat 3, and recommended transition to private sector operation of Landsat. This occurred in 1985 when the
Earth Observation Satellite Company (EOSAT), a partnership of
Hughes Aircraft and
RCA, was selected by NOAA to operate the Landsat system under a ten year contract. EOSAT operated Landsats 4 and 5, had exclusive rights to market Landsat data, and was to build Landsats 6 and 7.
In
1989, this transition hadn't been fully completed when NOAA's funding for the Landsat program ran out and NOAA directed that Landsats 4 and 5 be shut down, but an act of the
United States Congress provided emergency funding for the rest of the year. Funding ran out again in 1990 and once again Congress provided emergency funding to NOAA for six more months of operations, requesting that agencies that used Landsat data provide the funding for the other six months of the upcoming year. The same funding problem and solution was repeated in
1991. In
1992, various efforts were made to finally procure funding for follow on Landsats and continued operations, but by the end of the year EOSAT ceased processing Landsat data. Landsat 6 was finally launched on
October 5 1993, but was lost in a launch failure. Processing of Landsat 4 and 5 data was resumed by EOSAT in
1994. NASA finally launched Landsat 7 on
April 15,
1999.
The value of the Landsat program was recognized by Congress in October 1992 when it passed the
Land Remote Sensing Policy Act (Public Law 102-555) authorizing the procurement of Landsat 7 and assuring the continued availability of Landsat digital data and images, at the lowest possible cost, to traditional and new users of the data.
Satellite chronology
Technical details
The Multi-Spectral-Scanner had a 9" fused silica dinner-plate mirror epoxy bonded to three
invar tangent bars mounted to base of a
Ni/
Au brazed Invar frame in a serreuire
truss that was arranged with four "Hobbs-Links" (conceived by Dr. Gregg Hobbs) crossing at mid truss. This construct ensured the
secondary mirror would simply oscillate about the primary optic axis to maintain focus despite vibration inherent from the 14-inch
Be scan mirror. This engineering solution allowed the US to develop LANDSAT at least five years ahead of French
SPOT which first used
CCD arrays to stare without need for a scanner.
The MSS FPA, or
Focal Plane Array consisted of 24 square optical fibers extruded down to .0002"square fiber tips in a 4x6 array to be scanned across the Nimbus spacecraft path in a +/-6 degree scan as the satellite was in a 10:30 polar orbit, hence it had to be launched from
Vandenburg AFB. The
fiber optic bundle was embedded in a fiber optic plate to be terminated at a relay optic device that transmitted fiber end signal on into six photodiodes and 18 photomultiplier tubes that were arrayed across a 0.30-inch thick aluminum tool plate, with sensor weight balanced vs the 9-inch telescope on opposite side. This main plate was assembled on a frame, then attached to the
silver-loaded
magnesium housing with helicoil fasteners.
Key to MSS success was the scan monitor mounted on the underbelly of the Mg housing. It consisted of a diode source & sensor mounted at ends of four flat mirrors that were tilted so that it took 14 bounces for a beam to reflect length of the three mirrors from source to sender striking Be scan mirror seven times as it reflected seven times off the flat mirrors. It only sensed three positions, both ends of scan & the mid scan, but that was all that was required to determine where MSS was pointed and electronics scanning could be calibrated to display a map.
Future
The Landsat Data Continuity Mission, scheduled to be launched in 2011, will be the next satellite in the Landsat series.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Landsat'.
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