Iran Daily

UK’S Ordnance Survey to launch mapping drone

-

British mapping organizati­on Ordnance Survey plans to launch a solar-powered drone to capture higher quality images of the Earth.

Its Astigan craft will fly higher than commercial airliners at 67,000 feet (20,400 meters), and could circle the Earth for 90 days before it needs to land, BBC wrote.

It will collect images and data for businesses and organizati­ons to use.

It hopes to launch ‘fully operationa­l highaltitu­de tests’ of the craft before the end of 2019.

Ordnance Survey owns 51 percent of Astigan, which is based in Bridgwater, Somersetm, South West England.

It operates from the same factory that once housed Facebook’s Aquila Internet drone project.

The space became available after Facebook abandoned its drone plans, and the company said there is otherwise no link between the two drone projects.

Ordnance Survey told the BBC that the existing mapping satellites orbiting the Earth cannot provide enough high resolution detail for its maps.

Its Astigan drone is a high-altitude pseudo satellite. Rather than circling the planet, it will be controlled from the ground and sent to map large areas of interest.

“Our current mapping capabiliti­es are driven by two efforts,” explained Neil Ackroyd, the acting chief executive of Ordnance Survey.

“One is using fixed-wing aircraft to take photos for our revision program. Then we have our field surveyors on the ground, supported by data from local authoritie­s and the land registry.

“What the Astigan project does is gives us the capability of using aircraft, but quicker and at significan­tly lower cost.”

The cameras the Astigan craft will carry will be similar to those on mapping aircraft. Ordnance Survey said it would not be possible to identify people on the images.

“It’s hard to see people vertically, as you can only see the top of people’s heads,” said Ackroyd.

The drone will be used to collect images and data for use in commercial and industrial applicatio­ns, so the images are unlikely to show up on services such as Google Maps or Bing.

As well as mapping the UK, Ordnance Survey plans to offer mapping services to countries that otherwise struggle to afford them because of the cost or their large geography.

The platform will also be made available to companies who want to attach their own sensors and cameras, for example to track climate change.

 ??  ?? ORDNANCE SURVEY
ORDNANCE SURVEY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran