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  • Includes copy of AGSO Record 1997/20

  • Includes copy of AGSO Record 1997/20

  • No abstract available

  • Includes copy of AGSO Record 1997/20

  • Pan-sharpened satellite imagery of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands recorded using the QuickBird Digital Globe satellite, taken over the islands in November 2003. Each pixel represent 0.6m.

  • Supplied by the Australian Hydrographic Service for LOSAMBA. Use is restricted. Contact Grant Boyes for details.

  • The JERS-1 satellite was developed by the National Space Development Agency of Japan (NASDA). JERS-1 was launched in February 1992 and operated until 11 October 1998. The satellite traveled at an altitude of 568 kilometres and provided coverage of the entire globe every 44 days. The L-band, Synthetic Appeture Radar (SAR) sensor was the primary Earth-observing instrument. The SAR is an active microwave sensor capable of imaging earth resource targets regardless of time of day, cloud, haze or smoke cover of an area. The instrument is classified "active" as it emits the energy necessary to image the earth's surface. In contrast, "passive" or "optical" sensors rely on the sun's reflected energy to image the earth. The SAR ground swath is 75 kilometres wide, with a nominal 18 metre pixel resolution. The sensor has HH polarisation. ACRES JERS SAR acquisition commenced in September 1993 and ended in October 1998.

  • Earth Observation -1 (EO-1) satellite was launched in November 2000 to demonstrate new technologies such as Hyperion (hyperspectral data containing 220 bands) and Advanced Land Imager (ALI) sensor. ACRES downlinks EO-1 data for USGS through an informal arrangement with NASA but there is no local archive or catalogue. However, ACRES distributes EO-1 products imported from US through a special arrangement with the United States Geological Survey (USGS). This special arrangement permits ACRES customers to receive unlimited acquisitions over their area of interest until it is successfully acquired with <25% cloud cover.

  • Two ERS satellites have been developed by the European Space Agency (ESA). ERS-1 was launched on 17 July 1991 and ERS-2 on 20 April 1995. Both ERS satellites travel at an altitude of 785 kilometres and provide coverage of the entire globe every 35 days. The C-band, Synthetic Appeture Radar (SAR) sensor has been the primary Earth-observing instrument. The SAR is an active microwave sensor capable of imaging earth resource targets regardless of time of day, cloud, haze or smoke cover of an area. The instrument is classified "active" as it emits the energy necessary to image the earth's surface. In contrast, "passive" or "optical" sensors rely on the sun's reflected energy to image the earth. The SAR ground swath is 102.5 kilometres wide, with a nominal 30 metre pixel resolution. The sensor has VV polarisation. ACRES ERS-1 archive includes data acquired from September 1991 to March 2000, while ACRES ERS-2 acquisitions started in November 1995 and continues to present.