Abstract

PROBA-V (Project for On-Board Autonomy – Vegetation) is an ESA (European Space Agency) mission developed within the framework of the Agency’s General Support Technology Programme (GSTP) devoted to the observation of the Earth’s vegetation, providing data continuity with the SPOT (Satellite pour l’Observation de la Terre) 4 and 5 VEGETATION payloads as a gap-filler to the ESA Sentinel-3 mission. The PROBA-V space segment is based on a three-axis stabilized PROBA small-satellite platform of about 140 kg equipped with a state-of-the-art compact 4-band multi-spectral imager with a large field of view. The instrument’s optomechanics is based on three very compact TMA (three mirror anastigmat) telescopes placed on an optical bench. At an altitude of 820 km, the instrument is able to provide daily coverage of the Earth in three VNIR (visible and near-infrared) bands and one SWIR (short-wave infrared) spectral band, with a spatial resolution of up to 100 m × 100 m at nadir for the VNIR. The instrument raw data will be downlinked with an X-band transmitter to the ground reception station in Kiruna, Sweden. The mission control centre is located in Redu, Belgium. The image processing centre, the so-called ‘user segment’, automatically accesses the raw data and is responsible for the processing and the dissemination of the data products towards the user community. The PROBA-V spacecraft was launched on board the new European launcher Vega on 7 May 2013. It is designed for a nominal mission lifetime of 2.5 years with a possible extension to 5 years.

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