Quote from: LittleBird on 01/22/2024 02:20 pmQuote from: edzieba on 01/22/2024 01:41 pmQuote from: Star One on 01/22/2024 06:15 amI’m guessing the images in this report could originally been from a KH-11 but downgraded, but these days could just as easily be commercial images:https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/22/uk-sends-un-experts-photographs-north-korean-shipments-russiaThe "2023 Planet Labs Inc." in the corner is rather a giveaway.200 satellites, 50 cm resolution ... I still find today's world hard to get used to sometimes ;-) https://www.planet.com/products/Aren’t there meant to be calls by the commercial sector to be allowed to go a lot better than 50 cm now for non-government customers?
Quote from: edzieba on 01/22/2024 01:41 pmQuote from: Star One on 01/22/2024 06:15 amI’m guessing the images in this report could originally been from a KH-11 but downgraded, but these days could just as easily be commercial images:https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/22/uk-sends-un-experts-photographs-north-korean-shipments-russiaThe "2023 Planet Labs Inc." in the corner is rather a giveaway.200 satellites, 50 cm resolution ... I still find today's world hard to get used to sometimes ;-) https://www.planet.com/products/
Quote from: Star One on 01/22/2024 06:15 amI’m guessing the images in this report could originally been from a KH-11 but downgraded, but these days could just as easily be commercial images:https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/22/uk-sends-un-experts-photographs-north-korean-shipments-russiaThe "2023 Planet Labs Inc." in the corner is rather a giveaway.
I’m guessing the images in this report could originally been from a KH-11 but downgraded, but these days could just as easily be commercial images:https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/jan/22/uk-sends-un-experts-photographs-north-korean-shipments-russia
Aren’t there meant to be calls by the commercial sector to be allowed to go a lot better than 50 cm now for non-government customers?
Quote from: Star One on 01/23/2024 10:34 amAren’t there meant to be calls by the commercial sector to be allowed to go a lot better than 50 cm now for non-government customers?Albedo will offer commercial 10 cm satellite imagery in early 2025, with a few caveats.
Quote from: LittleBird on 03/13/2024 03:29 amWhat does strike me in the 77 docs is that people were anticipating a funding crunch and that as KH-11 would be kept, one other system would likely be phased out. This1977 doc: https://www.nro.gov/Portals/65/documents/foia/declass/GAMBIT%20DM/4.pdf (link still works, pdf attached) seems to be making the argument that you'd be better off keeping GAMBIT than HEXAGON if that was the choice. But I don't know if it is done for SAFSP or a proposal to them from Kodak and LMSC. [Edit: I assume this is the one you refer to as "Kodak's argument" above, Blackstar ?]That's the one I was thinking of.What's keeping this issue murky is that we still don't have anything good about early KENNEN operations and then upgrades. KENNEN appears to have had some early limitations in terms of resolution, bandwidth, and area coverage. All those things were gradually improved. (Sidenote: It also apparently had some lifetime and operations issues. I was once told by somebody--this might be in one of Richelson's books--that at one point they were having problems with the relay satellites being in the "wrong place" when the KENNEN was transmitting. I'm not exactly sure how that happened, but it was apparently a coordination issue between CIA's Program B and USAF's Program A within the NRO. That discussion belongs in the KENNEN thread.)
What does strike me in the 77 docs is that people were anticipating a funding crunch and that as KH-11 would be kept, one other system would likely be phased out. This1977 doc: https://www.nro.gov/Portals/65/documents/foia/declass/GAMBIT%20DM/4.pdf (link still works, pdf attached) seems to be making the argument that you'd be better off keeping GAMBIT than HEXAGON if that was the choice. But I don't know if it is done for SAFSP or a proposal to them from Kodak and LMSC. [Edit: I assume this is the one you refer to as "Kodak's argument" above, Blackstar ?]
200 satellites, 50 cm resolution ... I still find today's world hard to get used to sometimes
Quote from: LittleBird on 01/04/2024 01:24 pmInteresting oral history at AIP by Daniel Ford with Robert J Kohler: https://www.aip.org/history-programs/niels-bohr-library/oral-histories/40912-16I'll respect the AIP request not to excerpt it but there's lots to enjoy, especially about Richard Garwin's role (interview is one of a series about Garwin) and in particular the info that Westinghouse in Baltimore made the CCDs for KH-11 when these replaced the original EOI sensor. I think the existing docs list Westinghouse as one of the contractors for the original sensor but story stops before onset of CCDs.Good story about how Garwin debugged problems with CCD production by suggesting they check the humidifier in the Baltimore plant ... as one other interviewee says Garwin is the kind of physicist you want as a neighbour, having a degree of skill at fixing things not usually associated with theorists ;-)Many years ago I got a call from Garwin's biographer asking if I had anything on him. I only had a couple of anecdotes and no documents. Garwin was supposedly someone who led a report on MOL that raised the issue of the astronauts degrading the imagery. We don't have that report.
Interesting oral history at AIP by Daniel Ford with Robert J Kohler: https://www.aip.org/history-programs/niels-bohr-library/oral-histories/40912-16I'll respect the AIP request not to excerpt it but there's lots to enjoy, especially about Richard Garwin's role (interview is one of a series about Garwin) and in particular the info that Westinghouse in Baltimore made the CCDs for KH-11 when these replaced the original EOI sensor. I think the existing docs list Westinghouse as one of the contractors for the original sensor but story stops before onset of CCDs.Good story about how Garwin debugged problems with CCD production by suggesting they check the humidifier in the Baltimore plant ... as one other interviewee says Garwin is the kind of physicist you want as a neighbour, having a degree of skill at fixing things not usually associated with theorists ;-)
Or was it just P.E being more visionary than Kodak and planning their machinery in advance, just in case ?
Quote from: Emmettvonbrown on 05/20/2024 03:55 pmOr was it just P.E being more visionary than Kodak and planning their machinery in advance, just in case ? I don't know. I was a bit surprised to learn this from Kodak people. And unfortunately, the one person I knew who could possibly shed light on it, Phil Pressel, died last year.
Quote from: Blackstar on 05/20/2024 04:02 pmQuote from: Emmettvonbrown on 05/20/2024 03:55 pmOr was it just P.E being more visionary than Kodak and planning their machinery in advance, just in case ? I don't know. I was a bit surprised to learn this from Kodak people. And unfortunately, the one person I knew who could possibly shed light on it, Phil Pressel, died last year.One wonders what would have launched it. Before late 80s i assume a ten foot mirror would have needed a shuttle or maybe a Titan IIIE ?
Quote from: LittleBird on 05/20/2024 04:31 pmQuote from: Blackstar on 05/20/2024 04:02 pmQuote from: Emmettvonbrown on 05/20/2024 03:55 pmOr was it just P.E being more visionary than Kodak and planning their machinery in advance, just in case ? I don't know. I was a bit surprised to learn this from Kodak people. And unfortunately, the one person I knew who could possibly shed light on it, Phil Pressel, died last year.One wonders what would have launched it. Before late 80s i assume a ten foot mirror would have needed a Shuttle or maybe a Titan IIIE ?You meant to write "Starship," right?
Quote from: Blackstar on 05/20/2024 04:02 pmQuote from: Emmettvonbrown on 05/20/2024 03:55 pmOr was it just P.E being more visionary than Kodak and planning their machinery in advance, just in case ? I don't know. I was a bit surprised to learn this from Kodak people. And unfortunately, the one person I knew who could possibly shed light on it, Phil Pressel, died last year.One wonders what would have launched it. Before late 80s i assume a ten foot mirror would have needed a Shuttle or maybe a Titan IIIE ?
This interesting bit of information has popped out on the Hubble thread, downstairs this forum. Ok, so Perkin Elmers had the machinery in place to polish mirrors 3 m / 120 inch / 10 ft in diameter. Which brings the unavoidable question: did the spooks ever dreamed of 3m diameter mirrors KH-11s ? Or was it just P.E being more visionary than Kodak and planning their machinery in advance, just in case ? "the one after KH-11, or a Block II, may request a 120 inch diameter..."
Quote from: Emmettvonbrown on 05/20/2024 03:55 pmThis interesting bit of information has popped out on the Hubble thread, downstairs this forum. Ok, so Perkin Elmers had the machinery in place to polish mirrors 3 m / 120 inch / 10 ft in diameter. Which brings the unavoidable question: did the spooks ever dreamed of 3m diameter mirrors KH-11s ? Or was it just P.E being more visionary than Kodak and planning their machinery in advance, just in case ? "the one after KH-11, or a Block II, may request a 120 inch diameter..." Just to note, if you go up-thread a bit, you'll see where I mentioned the 3-meter mirror subject a few months ago. After doing a bunch of interviews with former Kodak people, I have not done any more research or follow-up on this. My day job gets in the way of my hobby. (Which is why my TSR publishing has slowed down.)Something raised over on that other thread was a comment about reducing the diameter from 3 meters to 2.4 meters because of mass. But that raises an interesting question: what did NASA understand about the mass of large optics at that time? Kodak had mastered lowering the mass of large mirrors (something that you can see a lot earlier in this thread). Did NASA know how much? Were they guessing?
So I'm going to keep musing on this...I have some nice images of artwork showing the 3-meter version of the Large Space Telescope. Probably date from around 1973. Unfortunately, they are film slides and I need to figure out how to scan them. I have not found them on the internet.I know that books have been written about the development of Hubble. I suspect that new stuff could be written now that we're getting more info on the development of large optics in the 1970s.
Quote from: Blackstar on 05/21/2024 05:35 pmSo I'm going to keep musing on this...I have some nice images of artwork showing the 3-meter version of the Large Space Telescope. Probably date from around 1973. Unfortunately, they are film slides and I need to figure out how to scan them. I have not found them on the internet.I know that books have been written about the development of Hubble. I suspect that new stuff could be written now that we're getting more info on the development of large optics in the 1970s.Would a 3 meter mirror on HST fit in the shuttle cargo bay?
Then there's segmented mirror designs. Among many others, LAMP from Itek back in the mid 80's, and LODE from Lockheed in the late 70's, possibly some work occurring even earlier. Officially these mirrors were for space-based lasers, but it could hardly have escaped NRO's attention that their prime contractors were also working on much larger diameter mirrors ground to very high optical quality, and with other desirable features like actively controlled thinned substrates. Publicly, the only segmented design the NRO has acknowledged having anything to do with was the Segmented Mirror Telescope …