Author Topic: Kestrel Eye satellite launched to International Space Station aboard SpaceX  (Read 704 times)

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Offline Elderberry

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Space Daily by Stephen Carlson Washington (UPI) Aug 15, 2017

 The U.S. Army has successfully launched a Kestrel Eye reconnaissance microsatellite aboard a SpaceX mission to the International Space Station.

The launch took place at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., on Monday and included cargo resupply for the ISS crew. The Kestrel Eye will be deployed from the ISS following a scheduled Japanese airlock experiment.

The Kestrel Eye is a 50-kilogram electro-optical imagery satellite about the size of a small refrigerator. It is designed to relay orbital reconnaissance imagery directly to soldiers on the ground rather than through stations in the continental United States.

The Army claims that the small satellites can be placed into orbit at $2 million a piece once it enters full-production, allowing more to be deployed than conventional satellites.

"Lower cost satellites can be deployed in larger numbers to provide higher revisits and offload demand from national technical means satellites," program deputy director Mark Ray said in a news release.

The Army expects each satellite to have a service life of more than a year.

More: http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Kestrel_Eye_satellite_launched_to_International_Space_Station_aboard_SpaceX_999.html

Offline Elderberry

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The Kestrel Eye electro-optical nano-satellite will be able to produce images of 1.5-meter resolution that can be downlinked to front-line warfighters. The idea is to demonstrate a tactical nanosat that could be built in large numbers to provide persistent-surveillance capability to ground forces.

Army officials would like the capability to produce high-resolution satellite images and downlink them to front-line warfighters within 10 minutes.

The Kestrel Eye program will extend the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) paradigm into space, Army officials say. The eventual goal is to provide persistent coverage to every soldier on a hand-held device about the size of today's GPS receivers. The idea is to enable soldiers to click on any point of the ground displayed on a world map and call up real-time imagery of the area.

http://www.militaryaerospace.com/articles/2014/10/quantum-kestrel-eye.html