The images in this section
were acquired by
Corona, IKONOS and Landsat
satellites
Corona, USA's first operational
intelligence satellite, carried sophisticated optical cameras (KH-4B system) to
acquire imagery of the Earth from space at an altitude of 80 nautical miles (150 km). It was launched in 1967. The camera system included two 24-inch
focal length, f3.5 panoramic cameras with separate forward looking and rear
looking capability, and a tilting angle of 30 degrees to take stereoscopic
photos. Films taken by the camera
were contained in a capsule. The
satellite was designed to de-orbit the film capsules from space, which were
recovered in mid-air by specially equipped aircraft.
The mission life of the
system was 19 days. The frame
format of the panoramic camera was about 2.18 x 29.8 inches. Each frame covered a ground area of
about 8.6 x 117 miles (14 x 188 km).
The best quality resolution of 6 feet (2-metre) can be enlarged nearly
40 times up to 1:7,500 from the original film at a nominal scale of 1:247,500.
Declassified in 1994, the
photos taken by the satellite constitute a valuable source of historical
information for study of environmental changes.
IKONOS (pronounced
eye-KOH-nos), owned by Space Imaging, was launched on September 24, 1999. It is the world's first high resolution
commercial satellite to offer imagery to the private and public sectors. At an altitude of 400 miles (680 km),
the satellite collects imagery that can distinguish objects on the Earth's surface as small as one metre square in black and white and four metres square
in colour.
Unlike the Corona satellite which captured imagery on photographic films, IKONOS and Landsat satellites carry sensors to collect electromagnetic radiation reflected from the ground. The data ware converted into electrical signals and then transmitted in digital form to a ground receiving station. These digital data are subsequently processed to generate images. The imagery is composed of a matrix of pixels. Each pixel represents the amount of light within a spectral band reflected from the Earth's surface. Using various combinations of spectral bands, different techniques of image processing and enhancement as well as merging of different remotely sensed data, spectacular images can be generated to highlight particular features to facilitate interpretation and analysis.