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Last updated on February 11, 2012 at 11:16 EST

Earth-Imaging Satellite Travels to Space

September 19, 2007
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VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. – A rocket carrying a next-generation Earth-imaging satellite blasted off Tuesday on a mission that promises to zoom in on objects as small as 18 inches across.

The WorldView-1 satellite, built for DigitalGlobe, which supplies much of Google Earth’s imagery, was lofted into space aboard a Delta 2 rocket. The satellite separated from the rocket about an hour after liftoff and was circling some 300 miles above the Earth.

WorldView-1 was designed to collect up to 290,000 square miles’ worth of imagery a day – an area about the size of Texas. Information gathered by the 5,000-pound probe can be used by governments and companies to assess damage after a natural disaster or plan escape routes before a catastrophe, the company said.

It is expected to be in operation for about seven years.

WorldView-1 is the first of two advanced remote sensing satellites that DigitalGlobe plans to launch. The company has said its sister satellite, WorldView-2, will be ready for launch late next year.

DigitalGlobe, a privately held Colorado-based provider of high-resolution commercial satellite imagery, also manages the QuickBird commercial satellite launched in 2001. While WorldView-1′s resolution is only slightly higher than QuickBird, the new probe can store more images because it has a larger onboard system.

On the Net:

DigitalGlobe: http://www.digitalglobe.com