Radarsat-1
Template:Short description Template:Use Canadian English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox spaceflight
RADARSAT-1 was Canada's first commercial Earth observation satellite. It utilized synthetic aperture radar (SAR) to obtain images of the Earth's surface to manage natural resources and monitor global climate change. As of March 2013, the satellite was declared non-operational and is no longer collecting data.
MissionEdit
RADARSAT-1 was launched at 14:22 UTC on 4 November 1995,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, into a Sun-synchronous orbit (dawn-dusk) above the Earth with an altitude of Template:Cvt and inclination of 98.60°.<ref name=characteristics/> Developed under the management of the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) in co-operation with Canadian provincial governments and the private sector, it provided images of the Earth for both scientific and marketing purposes. RADARSAT-1's images were useful in many fields, including agriculture, cartography, hydrology, forestry, oceanography, geology, ice and ocean monitoring, arctic surveillance, and detecting ocean oil slicks.
HistoryEdit
The Canadian Space Agency (CSA) RADARSAT-1 project was conceived in the early 1980s and included discussions with NASA.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
NASA provided the Delta II launch vehicle to launch RADARSAT-1 and access to the NASA Deep Space Network (NASA DSN) in exchange for access to its data. Estimates are that the project, excluding launch, cost CA$620 million. The Canadian federal government contributed about CA$500 million, the four participating provinces (Québec, Ontario, Saskatchewan and British Columbia) about CA$57 million, and the private sector about CA$63 million.
RADARSAT International, Inc. (RSI), a Canadian private company, was created in 1989 to process, market and distribute RADARSAT-1 data. (RADARSAT International, Inc. (RSI) was later acquired by MacDonald Dettwiler and Associates.) In 2006, RSI was rebranded MDA Geospatial Services International or MDA GSI.
PayloadEdit
RADARSAT-1 used a synthetic aperture radar (SAR) sensor to image the Earth at a single microwave frequency of 5.3 GHz, in the C band (wavelength of 5.6 cm).<ref name=characteristics/> The SAR support structure was designed and manufactured by Northrop Grumman Astro Aerospace and deployed to Template:Cvt in length on orbit. Unlike optical satellites that sense reflected sunlight, SAR systems transmitted microwave energy towards the surface and recorded the reflections. Thus, Radarsat-1 imaged the Earth, day or night, in any atmospheric condition, such as cloud cover, rain, snow, dust or haze.
Each of RADARSAT-1's seven beam modes offered a different image resolution. The modes included Fine, which covers an area of Template:Cvt (Template:Cvt) with a resolution of Template:Cvt; Standard, which covered an area of Template:Cvt (Template:Cvt) and had a resolution of Template:Cvt; and ScanSAR wide, which covered a Template:Cvt (Template:Cvt) area with a resolution of Template:Cvt. RADARSAT-1 also had the unique ability to direct its beam at different angles.<ref name=characteristics/>
OrbitEdit
With an orbital period of 100.70 minutes, RADARSAT-1 circled the Earth 14 times a day.<ref name=characteristics/> The orbit path repeated every 24 days, meaning that the satellite was in exactly the same location and could take the same image (same beam mode and beam position) every 24 days. This was useful for interferometry and detecting changes at that location that took place during the 24 days. Using different beam positions, a location could also be scanned every few days.
RADARSAT-1 was a right-looking satellite,<ref name=characteristics/> meaning that the microwave beam transmits and receives on the right side of the satellite, relative to its orbital path. As it descends in its orbit from the North Pole, it faces west, and when it ascends from the South Pole, it faces east. Locations could therefore be imaged from opposite sides. Combined with the different beam modes and positions, this provided users with many possible perspectives from which to image a location.
End of serviceEdit
On 4 November 2010, RADARSAT-1 celebrated its 15-year service anniversary.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref> It outlived its planned five-year lifetime by a wide margin. Radarsat-2 was launched on 14 December 2007 from Baikonur, Kazakhstan<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
RADARSAT-1 covered the Arctic daily, and most of Canada every 72 hours depending on instrument orientation and mode. It covered the entire Earth every 24 days.
On 29 March 2013, RADARSAT-1 experienced a technical problem. The Canadian Space Agency (CSA) assembled a team of engineers, who conducted an extensive investigation. Following numerous attempts to resolve the problem, the CSA, in consultation with its commercial data distributor MDA Geospatial Services Inc. concluded that RADARSAT-1 was no longer operational.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref>
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