The Landsat Technical
Working Group #16 was held in Brazil from May 14 - 18, 2007 with
the participation of eleven countries: Argentina, Australia,
Brazil, Canada, China, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Russia, South
Africa, and the United States.
In the first day's plenary session Mr. Michael J. Headley,
the USGS LDCM Project Manager of Remote Sensing Systems, USGS
Center for Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS),
gave an LDCM Project Status Report.
The LDCM is the next in a series of highly successful Landsat
satellites. It will provide a continuity in Earth observations
and obtain valuable data and imagery to be used in agriculture,
education, business, science, and government activities.
The launch readiness date of LDCM satellite is currently targeted
for July 2011 and will be followed by a 90 day on-orbit checkout
and acceptance period. The LDCM development is a joint project
between NASA and the USGS. The following are outlines of NASA's
and USGS's respective LDCM responsibilities.
NASA will be responsible for the following.
- Acquire the space segment, mission operations systems, and
launch services
- Perform overall mission systems engineering and integration
- Manage space segment early on-orbit operations from launch
to acceptance
- After on-orbit acceptance, transition operations responsibility
to the USGS
- Co-chair the Landsat Science Team
USGS will be responsible for the following.
- Acquire and operate the ground system including data networks,
image collection scheduling, archive, processing, and distribution
systems
- Perform ground system integration and support mission integration
- Operate and maintain the LDCM mission following on-orbit
acceptance
- Co-chair and fund the Landsat Science Team
The specified design life of the LDCM satellite is 5 years
with 10 years of consumables, and it will support seasonal
and global image data collection similar to Landsat 7.
The LDCM Operational Land Imager (OLI) has 9 spectral bands
including new deep blue and cirrus bands. The resolution for
VIS/NIR/SWIR is 30m and the PAN band is 15m.
LDCM's image swath width is 185km with a 16-day repeat cycle
just as with the Landsat 7 mission.
Landsat image data is used extensively not only in Asia, but
throughout the world.
The LDCM mission is expected to contribute to disaster relief
activities, environmental monitoring, and other activities
in the Asia-Pacific region.
LDCM websites: http://ldcm.usgs.gov/ and http://ldcm.nasa.gov/