Kuwait Times

Europe launches fourth Earth monitoring satellite

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Europe launched a fourth satellite yesterday for its Copernicus Earth-monitoring project to track changes in forest cover and air pollution, the European Space Agency (ESA) announced. The 1.1-tonne, “color-vision” Sentinel-2B satellite blasted off on a Vega rocket from Europe’s space port in Kourou, French Guiana, overnight, and was successful­ly placed in Earth orbit, it said. In about three days, controller­s will start calibratin­g instrument­s to commission the satellite, which is to start operations in three to four months.

“With this launch we are taking another step toward advancing the Copernicus program, which is the most sophistica­ted Earth observatio­n system in the world,” ESA director general Jan Woerner said in a statement. Two more satellites are to follow in the coming months. Sentinel-SB, a twin of Sentinel2A launched in June 2015, will zoom in on changes in the Earth’s land mass and coastal zones-forest cover and pollution in lakes and coastal waters, for example.

Between them, the Sentinel-2 pair will cover the Earth’s entire surface in five days. They are placed in the same orbit, on opposite sides of the planet, 180 degrees apart. “Each Sentinel-2 satellite carries an innovative high-resolution multispect­ral camera with 13 spectral bands for a new perspectiv­e of land and vegetation,” the agency said. “The combinatio­n of high-resolution, novel spectral capabiliti­es, a field of vision covering 290 kilometers and frequent revisit times will provide unpreceden­ted views of Earth.”

Sentinel-1A was launched in April 2014 and Sentinel-1B two years later. They are equipped with special cloud-penetratin­g radar with which to monitor Earth’s surface by day and by night, regardless of the weather. Future satellites will focus on ocean data and Earth’s atmosphere. By mapping areas stricken by flood or earthquake, Copernicus will also help emergency teams identify worst-hit areas and locate passable roads, railway lines and bridges.

Copernicus, a program of the ESA and European Commission, is named for the 16th-century Polish astronomer who determined that the Earth orbited the Sun, and not the other way round, as convention had it at the time. —AFP

 ??  ?? KOUROU: This handout picture taken and released by the European Space Agency (ESA), the Centre national d’etudes spatiale and the Arianespac­e satellite launch company shows a Vega launcher carrying the Sentinel-2B satellite lifting off from Europe’s...
KOUROU: This handout picture taken and released by the European Space Agency (ESA), the Centre national d’etudes spatiale and the Arianespac­e satellite launch company shows a Vega launcher carrying the Sentinel-2B satellite lifting off from Europe’s...

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