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German Radar Satellite Lifts Off Tonight

2Y9D57 writes "Germany's new TanDEM-X radar satellite is scheduled to lift off from Baikonur Cosmodrome at 04:15 Berlin time on 21 June — that's 10:14 pm Eastern today (20 June). Flying in close formation with its twin satellite, TerraSAR-X, TanDEM-X will generate the most consistent and highest-resolution digital elevation map ever of the Earth — 12m = 40ft. pixel pitch. It will take three years to image all 150 million square kilometers (58 million square miles), in the process generating more than 350 TB of raw data. Here's where to go as the time approaches for live streaming."

3 of 65 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Another proprietary dataset? by 2Y9D57 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Infoterra GmbH will be responsible for commercial sales of the data. The German Aerospace Center deal with the scientific utilization.

  2. Re:His mama is so fat... by M8e · · Score: 4, Informative

    that she can be identified on a 40 ft resolution height map.

  3. Re:Another proprietary dataset? by the_other_chewey · · Score: 4, Informative

    data sets will be provided under COFUR (Cost Of Fulfilling User Request) conditions

    ...to parties that submit a request with a good reason and get it approved.

    You can't just show up with a bunch of hard drives and ask for the data, even if you're
    prepared to pay for costs that would produce.

    ESA (and ESA-related, TerraSAR is German-only) projects have a long and annoying history
    of keeping their data under wraps despite public funding and no objections by the scientific
    parties (priorities of potential discoveries matter) involved.

    Until this changes, it's still SRTM data for everyone.