Canadian RADARSAT Constellation satellites set to launch next week
MONTREAL — With the long-awaited launch of Canada’s next generation of Earth-observation satellites scheduled for next week, authorities at the Canadian Space Agency are excited about what the RADARSAT Constellation will soon able to provide for Canadians.
Officials at the agency offered an overview Tuesday of the $1.2-billion government-owned project to replace the RADARSAT-2 satellite, which has been in orbit since 2007.
The three identical satellites, which will work together to locate ships, monitor ecosystems and keep tabs on the Arctic among other tasks, will be launched into orbit from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on June 11.
Once operational later this year, the evenly spaced satellites will orbit Earth every 96 minutes at an altitude of about 600 kilometres. They are expected to generate 250,000 images per year — 50 times more than the first generation RADARSAT satellite.