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WorldView-1

WorldView-1
Mission type Earth observation
Operator DigitalGlobe
COSPAR ID 2007-041A
SATCAT no. 32060
Website DigitalGlobe WorldView-1
Mission duration Planned: 7.25 years
Elapsed: 9 years, 8 months, 19 days
Spacecraft properties
Bus BCP-5000
Manufacturer Ball Aerospace
Launch mass 2,500 kilograms (5,500 lb)
Dimensions 3.6 × 2.5 m (11.8 × 8.2 ft)
Power 3200 watts
Start of mission
Launch date 18 September 2007, 18:35:00 (2007-09-18UTC18:35) UTC
Rocket Delta II 7920-10C, D-326
Launch site Vandenberg SLC-2W
Contractor Boeing / United Launch Alliance
Orbital parameters
Reference system Geocentric
Regime LEO
Semi-major axis 6,872.02 km (4,270.08 mi)
Eccentricity 0.0005028
Perigee 497 km (309 mi)
Apogee 504 km (313 mi)
Inclination 97.87 degrees
Period 94.49 minutes
RAAN 113.04 degrees
Argument of perigee 99.35 degrees
Mean anomaly 15.24 degrees
Mean motion 15.24
Epoch 25 January 2015, 02:44:46 UTC
DigitalGlobe fleet
← QuickBird
GeoEye-1 →

WorldView-1 is a commercial earth observation satellite owned by DigitalGlobe. It was launched 18 September 2007, followed later by the WorldView-2 in 2009. First imagery from WorldView-1 was available in October 2007, prior to the six-year anniversary of the launch of QuickBird, DigitalGlobe's previous satellite.

WorldView-1 was partially financed through an agreement with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA). Some of the imagery captured by WorldView-1 for the NGA is not available to the general public. However, WorldView-1 freed capacity on DigitalGlobe's QuickBird satellite to meet the growing commercial demand for multi-spectral geospatial imagery.

Ball Aerospace built the WorldView-1 satellite bus and camera using an off-axis camera design identical to Quickbird, with the instrument's focal plane being supplied by ITT Exelis. The camera is a panchromatic imaging system featuring half-meter resolution imagery. With an average revisit time of 1.7 days, WorldView-1 is capable of collecting up to 750,000 square kilometers (290,000 sq mi) per day of half-meter imagery.



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