IKONOS, derived
from the Greek word for image, is the world’s first commercial
satellite able to collect black-and-white (panchromatic) images
with 82-centimeter resolution and multispectral imagery with
4-meter resolution. Imagery from both sensors can be merged
to create 1-meter color imagery (pan-sharpened). The more than
300 million square kilometers of imagery that IKONOS has collected
over every continent is being used for national security, military
mapping, air and marine transportation, and by regional and
local governments.
Ikonos has a repetitive, circular, sun-synchronous, near-polar
orbit guaranteeing full coverage of the earth. The sensor
can be inclined to acquire imagery up to 700 km either side
of the track (maximum incidence angle 26º), thus giving
the satellite the capacity to revisit, albeit with different
sensor angles and resolution, any area on the earth on average
every 1.5 days (data resolution up to 2 metres). An average
2.9 day revisit can be achieved for 1 metre resolution data
in an area that covers up to 300 kms either side of the track
(angle +/- 10°).
Ikonos has an on-board recorder, and so can acquire data
over almost any area of the Earth’s surface. This recorder
can hold 64Gbit of data (approximately 26 Full images of both
Pan and MS data), and the downlink of data is made at the stations
of Fairbanks and Tromsoe, in optimal position thanks to their
high latitude. |