S. Korea’s nanosat conducts earth observation mission

5 months ago

SEOUL: South Korean space start-up, Nara Space Inc, said Monday its nanosatellite, Observer-1A, has successfully conducted a mission for earth observation by capturing photos of major cities, including Busan and Dubai, reported the Yonhap news agency.

Observer-1A, South Korea’s first commercial nanosatellite, was launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California in November and successfully entered earth’s orbit.

The microsatellite, 20 cm in width and 40 cm in height, was tasked to capture its first recording of earth to monitor activities, such as ship and car movements, as well as changes in forest areas.

In the photos taken by the satellite, a harbour in South Korea’s southeastern port city of Busan and ships floating on the nearby sea can be seen.

They also show Palm Jumeirah, an artificial offshore island in Dubai, and US tech giant Apple Inc’s ring-shaped headquarters in Cupertino, California.

The photos currently have a spatial resolution of three metres per pixel, but Nara Space plans to upgrade the resolution to up to 0.5 metre per pixel with artificial intelligence-based image correction technology.

“The satellite can be used to analyse natural disasters to reduce damage, or crop situations of foreign countries to use the information for financial trades,“ Park Jae-pil, chief executive officer of Nara Space, said.

“It can be also used to monitor travel of equipment in North Korea’s and the destruction of nature’s ecosystems due to climate change,“ he added. -Bernama-Yonhap