India's Next EO Satellite to Feature Top Resolution

by | Mar 19, 2013

India's Cartosat-2B Earth observation satellite, shown here during testing, was launched on July 12, 2010. It carries a panchromatic sensor capable of acquiring images with a resolution of better than one meter. Cartosat-3 reportedly will collect .25-meter-resolution imagery.

According to a recent article in The Hindu, India's planned Cartosat-3 Earth observation (EO) satellite will offer .25-meter resolution, the world's highest commercial capability.

In Notes on Demands for Grants, 2013-2014 from India's Department of Space, which forms part of budget documents recently presented to Parliament, Cartosat-3 figures as a separate item. Cartosat-3 is an advanced remote sensing satellite with enhanced resolution of 0.25 [meters] for cartographic applications and high-resolution mapping, stated the document.

U.S. firm DigitalGlobe plans to launch WorldView-3 next year, which will supply images with a resolution of 0.31 meters. Cartosat-3's camera would better that performance. In the words of one expert, the satellite’s images could allow a scooter to be distinguished from a car.

In 1988, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) launched India's first operational remote sensing satellite, IRS-1A. The best resolution its cameras could provide was about 36 meters. Seven years later, IRS-1C offered panchromatic 5.8-meter resolution, supplying the highest-resolution images available from a civilian satellite until Space Imaging launched Ikonos in 1999, the first commercial satellite with submeter capabilities.

Image courtesy of ISRO.

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