Paper
22 September 2009 Hyperspectral architecture study for land management
Timothy N. Miller, Raymond M. Bell Jr., Douglas B. Helmuth, David A Bennett, Christopher A Lentz
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Abstract
Remote-sensing hyperspectral sensors operating in the reflective bands offer the opportunity to vastly improve land management worldwide by providing continuous coverage and continuity of satellite capability. We assess the requirements for such sensors that will provide the needed revisit rates, coverage and imaging performance. From these requirements we select a range of potential system-level architectures, and derive their constellations, including orbital parameters and the number of needed satellites. We further discuss how the initial requirements drive the architecture parameters and performance. We demonstrate that a single satellite will not meet the current needs of the environmental sensing community, rather a constellation of multiple operational satellites is required for desirable worldwide land management missions.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Timothy N. Miller, Raymond M. Bell Jr., Douglas B. Helmuth, David A Bennett, and Christopher A Lentz "Hyperspectral architecture study for land management", Proc. SPIE 7474, Sensors, Systems, and Next-Generation Satellites XIII, 74741J (22 September 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.830641
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KEYWORDS
Satellites

Remote sensing

Satellite communications

Sun

Reflectivity

Sensors

Staring arrays

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