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Terrasar-X Scheduled For Launch From Baikonur On 27 February

The German radar satellite TerraSAR-X will orbit the Earth in a polar orbit at a height of 514 kilometres; using the mission's newly designed active antenna, it will gather high-quality X-band radar data from the entire planet. TerraSAR-X will operate independent of weather conditions, cloud coverage or lighting and will supply radar data at a resolution of up to 1 metre. Credit: EADS Astrium.
by Staff Writers
Cologne, Germany (SPX) Nov 27, 2006
The German radar satellite TerraSAR-X will be launched from Baikonur on 27 February 2007 on a Dnepr-1 rocket. This new launch date has now been announced by the German Aerospace Center (DLR) along with its industrial partners Astrium GmbH and Infoterra GmbH, responsible for the commercial exploitation of TerraSAR-X data. The launch originally planned for 31 October 2006 had to be shifted after an unsuccessful launch of a rocket of the same type last summer.

The single cause of this launch mishap was discovered and, after considering all necessary preparatory activities, 27 February has been selected as the new launch date.

"Our business is already going strong: distribution partners and customers around the world are eagerly waiting for the first datasets," says Joerg Herrmann, managing director of Infoterra GmbH. "Currently, we expect to be able to deliver the first preliminary data products to selected clients even prior to the spacecraft's full operationality." TerraSAR-X's full operationality is planned to be reached after five and a half months. Prior to this, scientists will support the mission calibration activities.

"Within the last year, we have received more than 200 proposals for scientific use of this new-quality data," says Achim Roth, TerraSAR-X Science Coordinator at DLR Oberpfaffenhofen. "We are convinced that numerous interesting and promising developments will evolve in the next few years - all based on TerraSAR-X data."

TerraSAR-X is the first German satellite to be built in a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) between DLR and EADS Astrium. Europe's leading satellite system specialist, EADS Astrium, contributes to the cost of development, construction and deployment of the spacecraft. The scientific exploitation of TerraSAR-X data will be conducted by DLR, while Infoterra GmbH is responsible for the commercial marketing. Circling Earth on a polar orbit at an altitude of 514 kilometres, TerraSAR-X, with its active antenna, will collect new-quality X-band radar data of the entire planet. The satellite will operate independent of weather conditions, cloud coverage and illumination, and will be capable of delivering data at a resolution of up to 1 metre.

DLR is Germany's national research centre for aeronautics and space. Its extensive research and development work is integrated into national and international cooperative ventures. As Germany's Space Agency, the German federal government has given DLR responsibility for the forward planning and implementation of the German space programme as well as international representation of Germany's interests. Throughout the TerraSAR-X Mission, DLR will run the so-called ground segment. This encompasses the infrastructure that is required to control the satellite in orbit as well as the complete value adding chain: ordering, data acquisition, data reception, image processing, archiving and delivery.

Infoterra GmbH was launched in 2001 for the purpose of exclusively pursuing the exploitation of TerraSAR-X. The company is responsible for marketing not only TerraSAR-X data, but geo-information products and services derived from, or based upon, this data as well. Infoterra GmbH employs a workforce of 30 in Friedrichshafen and is part of the Infoterra Group, which comprises companies in France, Germany and the United Kingdom with more than 300 employees and a turnover of 50 million Euro per year.

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Soyuz Booster Rocket Launches From Kourou To Cost 50 Million Dollars
Moscow (RIA Novosti) Nov 19, 2006
Launching one of Russia's new booster rockets from a site in French Guiana will cost customers $50 million, a European space company said Friday. Russian and French space officials signed a contract in February to launch four Soyuz-ST booster rockets from the Kourou launch site, on the northern coast of South America, over 10 years to orbit heavy cargoes.







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