wwww
NUS CRISP-1st station in the world receive data fr two 50-cm resolution satellites at the same facility
It will be naive to say that these two satellites will not help in
military applications.It will help in certain degree.
So,not bad.The more in merrier!!I heard teams from national Taiwan satellites
can get the live images faster than American and European stations.
If so,SG shall learn from them.Speed is very important in satellites,
not just resolutions!!
For example,can CRISP help to trace the NK ship carrying WMD
related materilas?
anyway,SG and Taiwan will replace old satellite.
Pl read at the end of this post.
- [ 翻译æ¤é¡µ ]NUS centre taps top satellite. New facility to access high-resolution data for research projects. Amresh Gunasingham, Straits Times 20 Jun 09;
New facility to access high-resolution data for research projects
Amresh Gunasingham, Straits Times 20 Jun 09;
Professor
Peter Ng, the director of TMSI, said the institutes are working
together on a study on the state of the marine environment in Pulau
Semakau. He said researchers will work on a long-term conservation plan
for the island, using the razor-sharp satellite imaging to study the
growth patterns of mangrove and coral reefs there.
A
SATELLITE dish at the top of a new $9 million building at the National
University of Singapore (NUS) can allow scientists to pick up satellite
images of objects as small as 50cm in size.
This level of
precision means that the satellite can pick out a man walking, although
he will appear as only a speck. For bigger objects, such as a car, the
satellite can keep track of where the vehicle is heading.
Researchers in Singapore have previously depended on satellite imagery with a resolution of 1m.
The
Sea-to-Space centre, which was opened by Environment and Water
Resources Minister Yaacob Ibrahim yesterday, will tap data from the
US$500 million (S$730 million) GeoEye-1 satellite - the world's
highest-resolution remote sensing satellite available for civilian use.
More
than $5 million worth of state-of-the-art equipment is currently housed
at the 1,830 sq m facility, where over 80 researchers from two research
institutes - the Centre for Remote Imaging, Sensing and Processing
(Crisp) and the Tropical Marine Science Institute (TMSI) - will come
together to engage in projects covering a range of disciplines.
Established
17 years ago, Crisp currently operates a ground station which tracks,
receives and processes data from remote sensing satellites. It monitors
hot spot regions over parts of Indonesia during the haze season.
TMSI has a large portfolio of projects in the field of environmental science.
At
the opening ceremony, Professor Barry Halliwell, deputy president
(research and technology) at NUS, said: 'The coming together of these
two research bodies under one roof is in tandem with the university's
drive towards high quality research over a broad range of
cross-disciplinary projects.'
Professor Peter Ng, the director
of TMSI, said the institutes are working together on a study on the
state of the marine environment in Pulau Semakau. He said researchers
will work on a long-term conservation plan for the island, using the
razor-sharp satellite imaging to study the growth patterns of mangrove
and coral reefs there.
'This will be a test site where we can bring our different skills together,' he said.
Mr
Kwoh Leong Keong, director of Crisp, said: 'The new technology really
provides a close-up view...We can now see intricate details such as the
lines along a tennis court on top of a building.'
The new
satellite imaging system also has a part to play in the humanitarian
relief operations that Singapore participates in. 'With this
technology, we can see the actual activity on the ground - the layout
of roads, canals, and even trees,' he said.
The ability to see very fine features improves mapping capabilities.
'This
is important in conducting relief operations during disasters such as
typhoons,' said Mr Kwoh. 'We need to know such details to know exactly
where to go.'
He highlighted the example of Crisp's role during
the 2004 tsunami in providing high resolution imagery of areas in
Indonesia's Aceh province stricken by the disaster as something that
can be improved upon. 'The roads were broken, so evacuation teams
needed to map out alternative paths to rescue people. Previous
satellite imaging could not provide such detail,' said Mr Kwoh.
The centre is the only ground station in the region to be able to receive and process data from the GeoEye-1 satellite.
The
facility's capabilities will be further boosted later this year when it
gains access to another 0.5m resolution satellite - the WorldView.
This
will make Crisp the first station in the world to receive data from two
0.5m resolution satellites at the same facility, said Prof Halliwell.
This means satellite images can be received in a shorter amount of
time.
http://wildsingaporenews.blogspot.com/2009/06/nus-centre-taps-top-satellite.html
,,,,,kkkk
http://www.crisp.nus.edu.sg/
- [ 翻译æ¤é¡µ ]Back to NUS homepage Tropical Marine Science Institute ... What looked like a bean sprout in the sea here identified by TMSI as a new species of sponge
www.tmsi.nus.edu.sg/
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http://www.space-travel.com/reports/Arianespace_To_Launch_ST_2_For_Singapore_And_Taiwan_999.html
NUS.... haiz... NUS..................................... haiz.