Earth Observing-1

Earth Observing-1 (EO-1)
Operator NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Major contractors Swales Aerospace
Northrop Grumman
Mission type Orbiter
Satellite of Earth
Launch date 2000-11-21 18:24:25 UTC
Launch vehicle Delta II 7320-10C
Launch site Space Launch Complex 2W
Vandenberg Air Force Base
Mission duration elapsed: 11 years, 3 months and 20 days
COSPAR ID 2000-075A
Homepage eo1.gsfc.nasa.gov
Mass 573 kg
Batteries 50 A-hr super Ni-Cd
Orbital elements
Eccentricity 7.0691365E-4
Inclination 98.21°
Altitude 705 km LEO
Apoapsis 700.0 km
Periapsis 690.0 km
Orbital period 98.7 minutes
Instruments
Main instruments Advanced Land Imager (ALI)
Hyperspectral Imager (Hyperion)
Atmospheric Corrector

The Earth Observing-1 Mission (EO-1) is part of NASA's New Millennium Program (NMP), to develop and validate a number of instrument and spacecraft bus breakthrough technologies designed to enable the development of future earth imaging observatories that will have a significant increase in performance while also having reduced cost and mass.

Its Advanced Land Imager (ALI) measures nine different wavelengths simultaneously, instead of the seven measured by the imager in Landsat 7. This permits a greater flexibility in false-color imagery. Another improvement is that instead of having an imaging spectrometer that sweeps from side to side, the ALI has a linear array of spectrometers that each scan a strip of ground parallel to that of adjacent spectrometers. In order to compare the two imagers, EO-1 follows Landsat 7 in its orbit by exactly one minute. Other new technologies include:

EO-1 has also been used to test new software, like the Autonomous Sciencecraft Experiment. This allows the spacecraft to decide for itself how best to create a desired image. It is only limited by a priority list of different types of images, and by forecasts of cloud cover provided by the NOAA.

It was expected to function for twelve months and was designed to function for eighteen months. Those expectations have been greatly exceeded.[1]

See also

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