Author Topic: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites  (Read 91024 times)

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Re: Planet Labs nano-sat earth imaging satellites
« Reply #121 on: 07/13/2018 01:35 am »
Quote
Flock Red-X Private Remote Sensing License: Public Summary

On October 11, 2017, the Commercial Remote Sensing Regulatory Affairs Office of the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, an agency of the Department of Commerce, granted a license to Planet Labs Inc.
to operate a private, commercial, space-based, remote sensing system named Flock Red-X consisting
of a launch of up to four satellites. These satellites are licensed to collect 6.4m resolution imagery of the Earth
at an altitude of approximately 500km and an inclination of 97.4-degrees.

Quote
SWIFT Private Remote Sensing License: Public Summary

On 12 April 2018, the Commercial Remote Sensing Regulatory Affairs Office of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (“NOAA CRSRA”), an agency of the Department of
Commerce, granted an amended license to Planet Labs Inc. (“Planet”) to operate a private,
commercial, space-based, remote sensing system consisting of up to 6 SWIFT satellites that
make up the Planet SWIFT constellation. The SWIFT satellites are licensed to collect synthetic
aperture radar imagery of the Earth’s surface and will operate at 350-650km altitude orbits.

Offline catdlr

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Re: Planet Labs nano-sat earth imaging satellites
« Reply #122 on: 08/16/2018 02:35 am »
The mission to create a searchable database of Earth's surface | Will Marshall


TED
Published on Aug 13, 2018

What if you could search the surface of the Earth the same way you search the internet? Will Marshall and his team at Planet use the world's largest fleet of satellites to image the entire Earth every day. Now they're moving on to a new project: using AI to index all the objects on the planet over time -- which could make ships, trees, houses and everything else on Earth searchable, the same way you search Google. He shares a vision for how this database can become a living record of the immense physical changes happening across the globe. "You can't fix what you can't see," Marshall says. "We want to give people the tools to see change and take action."



Tony De La Rosa, ...I'm no Feline Dealer!! I move mountains.  but I'm better known for "I think it's highly sexual." Japanese to English Translation.

Online gongora

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #123 on: 10/16/2019 02:42 am »
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Planet Announces More Spectral Bands, 50cm Resolution, Global Analytics, And Change Detection
October 15, 2019

This morning at our Explore 19 conference, Planet co-founder and CEO Will Marshall unveiled the latest product announcements that customers can look forward to in the next year.

Planet Monitoring

Will announced new capabilities for Next-Generation PlanetScope, our flagship monitoring solution powered by the latest iteration of our Dove satellite called SuperDove. New sensors are enabling higher image quality with sharper, more vibrant colors and accurate surface reflectance values for advanced algorithms and time-series analysis.

Next-Generation PlanetScope is interoperable with publicly available imagery, like Copernicus Sentinel-2, empowering customers to utilize PlanetScope data with other sensors to enhance their analyses with higher spatial and temporal resolution.

Currently, PlanetScope imagery has four spectral bands (red, green, blue, and near-infrared). Next, Planet will add more spectral bands to enable new applications and use cases. On stage, Will discussed details about the Next Generation Planetscope, which includes 4-band, 5-band and 8-band PlanetScope imagery powered by SuperDove. Customers can get access to this new 4-band PlanetScope imagery as part of an Early Access Program later in 2019, with 5-band and 8-band imagery made available in early 2020.

Planet Tasking – 50 cm SkySat

Will saved the best for last and introduced Planet’s highest resolution yet: 50cm SkySat imagery.

Planet is building this future capability by lowering the orbit of an existing SkySat and improving image processing to deliver 50 cm data. This new data will open up a wide array of applications in energy, mining, finance, and security, which require ultra-fine resolution to distinguish objects and features.

Planet aims to make this 50 cm imagery available to customers in the first half of 2020.

Planet Analytic Feeds

Planet’s Analytic Feeds are now generally available, allowing any customer to enhance their imagery products by adding Road Detection, Building Detection, or Vessel Detection Feeds. Planet Analytic Feeds use computer vision to automatically identify features of interest in Planet Basemaps and PlanetScope scenes.

For beta release at the end of this year, Change Detection Feeds let customers automatically detect change at global scale and rapid frequency—an unmatched capability. Customers can  efficiently locate where change has occurred to help focus where they spend their time, or to tip higher-resolution imagery, like SkySat, to get a closer look. Change Detection Feeds represent the next phase of our analytic capabilities, helping customers focus their resources on where change has recently occurred.

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Oct. 15, 2019  NRO awards Planet contract as part of transition of commercial imagery acquisition

CHANTILLY, Va. – The National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) today announced the transition of the
Planet commercial imagery subscription service from the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA)
to the NRO.

As part of the transition, the NRO awarded Planet an unclassified, multi-year subscription service
contract for daily, large-area, 3-5 meter resolution commercial imagery collection.

Recognizing the importance of mission continuity, the scope of the new NRO contract is comparable to
NGA’s previous contracts with Planet and includes access to new daily unclassified imagery over
multiple areas of interest to military planners, warfighters, and the national security community.

The transition is consistent with NGA’s and NRO’s role in exploring new and viable commercial GEOINT
opportunities for national security missions.

“With its large constellation of satellites, Planet can image country – and even continent-sized areas –
every day,” said Pete Muend, director, NRO’s Commercial Systems Program Office. “This capability to
provide daily revisit over large areas of the Earth gives analysts unparalleled opportunities to discover
and monitor activity for a wide range of applications.”

“The NRO is committed to ensuring NGA and its customers continue to have access to Planet imagery to
perform the vital analysis needed to create value-added geospatial products for our partners and policy
makers,” said Muend.

“NGA’s 2016 Planet subscription played a role in our analytic transformation, where we are now focused
less on pixels and more on information content and services,” said David Gauthier, director of NGA’s
Source Commercial and Business Operations Group.

Gauthier said Planet imagery demonstrated the value that daily revisit of large areas, at 3-5 meter
resolutions, to several mission areas – especially when combined with geospatial analytics.

“With the transition, NGA can continue to shift its focus to emerging commercial GEOINT products and
services that uniquely support our user community,” said Gauthier.

Online gongora

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #124 on: 12/18/2019 04:53 am »
SAT-MOD-20191217-00148
Quote
Planet Labs Inc. (“Planet”) respectfully requests authority to modify the authorization for
Planet’s SkySat Earth Exploration Satellite Service (“EESS”) system (FCC Call Sign S2862).

Specifically, Planet requests authority to:
● Modify the authorized orbital location for the SkySat-16 to SkySat-21 satellites to include
the inclination range 40° – 60° in addition to the currently authorized inclination range of
97.0° – 97.9°; and
● Modify the operational orbital altitude for SkySat-3 to include 400 km.

...

SkySat-16 through SkySat-18 are intended to be launched as secondary payloads in April
2020 on a Falcon 9 launch vehicle, and SkySat-19 through SkySat-21 are intended to be
launched as secondary payloads in June 2020 on a subsequent Falcon 9 launch vehicle. The six
SkySats are expected to be deployed into a 190 km x 380 km elliptical orbit.
« Last Edit: 12/18/2019 04:54 am by gongora »

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #126 on: 02/14/2020 03:32 am »
Quote
Pursuant to 15 C.F.R. §960.5(b), Planet Labs Inc. (“Planet”) herein provides the following summary of the private remote sensing space system license issued on November 15, 2019, by the Commercial Remote Sensing Regulatory Affairs Office, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, an agency of the Department of Commerce.
...
Planet is licensed to operate a private space-based high-resolution remote sensing system, consisting of two technology demonstration satellites. These satellites are licensed to collect Earth imagery with a best case resolution of 0.29 m GSD resolution from an orbital altitude between 250-550 km and an inclination of 40°-60° and 96°-99°.
« Last Edit: 02/14/2020 03:33 am by gongora »

Online gongora

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #127 on: 02/14/2020 05:48 pm »
https://twitter.com/ISILaunch/status/1228381338572595200
Quote
Superproud to support yet another @planetlabs SuperDoves launch! With well over 200 Doves brought to orbit in our @isis_space #QuadPacks before, these 14 are now mounted on the #VEGA SSMS POC structure https://bit.ly/38uGXps

Online gongora

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #128 on: 03/22/2020 12:57 am »
Quote
SAT-MOD-20191217-00148 E S2862
Grant of Authority Effective Date: 03/16/2020
Modification
Planet Labs Inc.
Nature of Service: Earth Exploration Satellite Service

On March 16, 2020, the Satellite Division granted, with conditions, for Planet Labs Inc.'s request to modify the authorization for its system to (1) modify the operational orbital altitude for the SkySat-3 satellite to include 400 km, and (2) modify the orbital location for SkySat-16 to SkySat-21 satellites to include the inclination range of 40.0 degrees to 60.0 degrees in addition to the currently authorized inclination range of 97.0 degrees and 97.9 degrees.

That's for the sats going up shortly on Starlink rideshares.

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #129 on: 08/21/2020 02:38 pm »
SkySat Constellation Complete: SkySats 19-21 Successfully Launch Aboard The SpaceX Falcon 9

Mike Safyan | August 18, 2020

The world’s largest fleet of high-resolution imaging satellites just welcomed three new satellites to the family. On August 18, 2020, SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket launched SkySats 19, 20 and 21 on yet another successful Starlink rideshare mission. Much like SkySats 16-18, which were launched by SpaceX on June 13, 2020, SkySats 19-21 were successfully injected into a drop-off orbit of approximately 207 x 370 km, 53 degree inclination.

Over the next several weeks the SkySat satellites will use their onboard propulsion to boost themselves up to their operational altitude of 400 km, and also begin phasing their orbital plane with respect to SkySats 16-18 in order to maximize coverage and revisit. Thanks to Exolaunch who helped deploy these most recent six SkySats with their CarboNIX deployer rings. These three new SkySats join the 18 others already in orbit and significantly expand our capacity to provide world class, high-resolution images to a variety of commercial, governmental, academic and non-profit organizations.

SkySats 19-21 are also the final SkySats to be built and launched, completing the campaign of 21 satellites originally planned by the SkyBox team in 2009. Eleven years later, the innovation of the SkySat design and mission remains world-class and continues to move the high-resolution satellite industry forward.

It’s been a busy few months here at Planet, with both SkySat and SuperDove launches stacking up as the launch industry recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic. Our satellite Mission Operations teams are hard at work bringing all the satellites online, so stay tuned to Planet Pulse and Twitter for more launch and satellite operations updates.

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #130 on: 12/30/2020 06:11 pm »
SES-LIC-INTR2020-03979  Microsoft Infrastructure Group, LLC
Quote
Microsoft Infrastructure Group, LLC (“Microsoft”) respectfully requests authority to operate two CGC 6.1-meterantennas in Quincy, Washington(“Quincy Earth Station”).1The Quincy Earth Station will communicate with Planet Labs Inc.’s (“Planet Labs”) FCC-authorized SKYSAT (Call Sign S2862) non-geostationary satellite orbit (“NGSO”)Earth Exploration Satellite Service (“EESS”) system.

The Quincy Earth Station will enable Earth Observation (“EO”) customers to access Microsoft Azure’s cloud computing network and securely download and process EO data. With growing demand for EO services such as disaster prediction and tracking, increased visibility of supply chains and economic activity, and many others, granting the requested Quincy Earth Station license will serve the public interest by facilitating these critical services and paving the way for Microsoft to offer a new, advanced service for EO customers located throughout the U.S. and elsewhere. This application seeks authority to communicate with the Planet Labs SKYSAT satellite system. Microsoft may seek to add additional points of communication through future applications

Offline su27k

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #131 on: 07/08/2021 04:27 am »
Planet valued at $2.8 billion in SPAC deal

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Planet announced July 7 it will go public in a $2.8 billion deal with a special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC), the second SPAC deal in the Earth observation sector in as many days.

Planet said it will merge with dMY Technology Group, Inc. IV, a SPAC that raised $345 million in a public offering in March. The merger agreement includes an additional $200 million in a concurrent round, called private investment in public equity.

After paying expenses and debt, the deal will provide Planet with $434 million in cash. It will give the San Francisco-based company at a post-transaction equity value of nearly $2.8 billion.

Offline su27k

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #132 on: 07/08/2021 04:29 am »
Steve Jurvetson recounting some history of the company:

https://twitter.com/FutureJurvetson/status/1412767772329660419

Quote
1)In 26 years of VC, I have invested in just two space companies, and today, I am SO proud to see Planet is going public!

They are like the iPhone of satellites disrupting the mainframe incumbents and  generating 10x the Earth imagery as all other companies combined.  Memories:

2)I first met the founders in the Black Rock Desert to launch their NASA PhoneSat in my friend’s rocket:

I led the seed round in 2011 before they incorporated & became the first outside board member, then led the Series A too.  Initial name was Cosmogia.

3)We drove to the Stanford dish to download the first images from the first two “Doves” (satellites for peace and awareness).  And then we put a tracking station on my roof in 2014.

Planet quickly became the small sat leader, with 2x as many EO birds as everyone else combined.

4)Some launch excitement:  at Future Ventures we display a Planet satellite that survived this Antares launch explosion in 2014.  Quite a robust little bird, she tweeted Yo! from the beach the next day. And Mission 1, with a record 88 satellites on board: https://bloomberg.com/news/videos/2017-06-28/the-all-seeing-eye-in-the-sky-video

5)In recent years, Planet has launched the majority of its satellites with SpaceX. Here’s the first meeting, with my Atlas vernier engine decorating the Planet HQ lobby (where it has been on loan for a decade as a good luck totem).

Congrats again, for the good of the planet!

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #133 on: 10/12/2021 03:50 pm »
https://www.planet.com/pulse/planet-introduces-new-high-resolution-pelican-satellites-and-fusion-with-sar/

Planet announced their new high-res satellite line, Pelican.  First launch in 2022, operational in 2023.

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/12/planet-labs-unveils-more-powerful-pelican-imagery-satellites.html
Quote
Schingler noted that the Pelican satellites will be smaller in size than the SkySat spacecraft, but “more dense” with a mass between 150 to 200 kilograms each.
« Last Edit: 10/12/2021 03:51 pm by gongora »

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #134 on: 12/08/2021 02:31 pm »
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211207006148/en/Planet-Announces-Closing-of-Business-Combination-with-dMY-Technology-Group-Inc.-IV

Quote
SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Planet Labs Inc. (“Planet”), a leading provider of daily data and insights about Earth, today announced the completion of its previously announced business combination (the “Business Combination”) with dMY Technology Group, Inc. IV, a publicly traded special purpose acquisition company (formerly NYSE: DMYQ) (“dMY IV”). The combined company has been renamed Planet Labs PBC and its shares and warrants will commence trading tomorrow, December 8th, 2021, on the New York Stock Exchange under the new ticker symbol “PL”.

“The company’s rapidly growing and one-to-many data platform business is poised for tremendous growth as data becomes increasingly central to the global economy. With a strong leadership team in place and a growing market for data-driven insights, Planet is well-positioned to further scale the business and drive value for shareholders.”

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“Today marks a huge milestone for Planet and our team, representing over a decade of hard work and dedication to using space to help life on earth,” said Planet co-founder and CEO Will Marshall. “Our listing on the NYSE and fully capitalized growth plan will enable us to accelerate our business and work with our partners towards creating a more sustainable and secure world.”

“Planet is a true pioneer, delivering critical insights and solutions to some of the world’s most influential companies and governments,” said Niccolo de Masi, CEO of dMY Technology Group and a member of the combined company’s board of directors. “The company’s rapidly growing and one-to-many data platform business is poised for tremendous growth as data becomes increasingly central to the global economy. With a strong leadership team in place and a growing market for data-driven insights, Planet is well-positioned to further scale the business and drive value for shareholders.”

In connection with the closing of the Business Combination, Planet received gross proceeds of over $590 million, including proceeds from the dMY IV trust account and the previously announced private placement (“PIPE”). The PIPE had participation from CPP Investments, Koch Strategic Platforms, Marc Benioff’s TIME Ventures, and existing Planet investor, Google, among others. The capital will be used to fund Planet’s operations and support new and existing growth initiatives.

The name Planet Labs PBC reflects the company’s status as a Public Benefit Corporation (PBC). Planet’s public benefit purpose is: “To accelerate humanity to a more sustainable, secure and prosperous world by illuminating environmental and social change.”

Planet’s management team, led by CEO and co-founder Will Marshall, Chief Strategy Officer and co-founder Robbie Schingler, CFO and COO Ashley Johnson, and President of Product and Business Kevin Weil, will continue to lead the public company following the Business Combination, as previously announced.

After the closing of the Business Combination, the combined company’s Board of Directors will consist of seven members: Will Marshall, Robbie Schingler, Heidi Roizen, Niccolo de Masi, Vijaya Gadde, Carl Bass and Ita Brennan.
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Offline XRZ.YZ

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #135 on: 12/08/2021 03:10 pm »
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/12/08/satellite-imagery-company-planet-begins-trading-on-the-nyse.html

Quote
atellite imagery and data specialist Planet began trading Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange, becoming the latest space company to debut after closing a SPAC deal.

“We have a strong business that’s growing well ... and what’s been most exciting about this whole process of going public is that I think there’s increasing awareness of the data set that we’re generating from space and what impact it can have,” Planet CFO and COO Ashley Johnson told CNBC.

Planet trades under the ticker PL, with shares previously listed under the special purpose acquisition company dMY Technology Group IV. The company has about 190 satellites in orbit, and recently unveiled plans for a new line of satellites called Pelican to further bolster its fleet.

The stock rose 2% from its previous close of $10.81 a share.

Closing its merger nets Planet more than $590 million in gross proceeds, with capital from dMY as well as a PIPE round – or private investment in public equity – led by BlackRock and joined by Google, Koch, and Marc Benioff’s TIME Ventures. After SPAC transaction fees and paying off debt, Johnson said Planet will have more than $500 million on its balance sheet.

“We estimate that for operating capital we need about $200 million over the next few years until we get to cashflow breakeven, and so that gives us a sizable war chest to really think about strategic moves,” Johnson said.

Johnson emphasized that Planet will use the remaining $300 million to take advantage of “consolidation in the industry or other opportunities that may present themselves.”

Planet and dMY closed the merger with a 2% redemption ratio, which represents the percentage of shares that investors redeem prior to closing of an acquisition.
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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #136 on: 12/14/2021 05:36 pm »
First Financial Result for Planet Labs after going public
https://investors.planet.com/news/news-details/2021/Planet-Reports-Financial-Results-for-Third-Quarter-of-Fiscal-2022/default.aspx
Quote
Third Quarter FY2022 Financial Highlights:

Revenue increased 16% year-over-year to $31.7 million.
Percent of Recurring Annual Contract Value (ACV) was 94%, compared to 93% in the third quarter of fiscal year 2021.
End of Period (EoP) Customer Count increased 32% year-over-year to 742 customers.
Gross Margin percentage expanded to 34%, compared to 27% in the third quarter of fiscal year 2021. Non-GAAP Gross Margin percentage expanded to 35%, compared to 28% in the third quarter of fiscal year 2021.
Net loss was $41.5 million and Adjusted EBITDA was ($12.3) million, driven by increased investments in R&D, sales and marketing and public company costs.
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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #137 on: 04/01/2022 09:09 pm »
https://investors.planet.com/news/news-details/2022/Planet-Reports-Financial-Results-for-Fourth-Quarter-and-Full-Year-of-Fiscal-2022/default.aspx

Fourth quarter revenue increased 23% year-over-year to $37.1 million.
Full year revenue increased 16% year-over-year to $131.2 million.

Fourth quarter gross margin expanded to 37%, compared to 25% in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2021.

net loss for Q4 $45.9million
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Offline XRZ.YZ

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Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #138 on: 04/21/2022 05:04 pm »
https://spacenews.com/planet-pelican-details/

The replacement for SkySat-Pelican will offer at least 10 daily views of Earth’s land mass and as many as 30 views of midlatitude locations with a resolution of 30 centimeters per pixel.

Ka-band inter-satellite data links

Will use other company's communication sat to relay data.

Hall-effect thrusters
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Offline TrevorMonty

Re: Planet Labs earth imaging satellites
« Reply #139 on: 04/21/2022 05:28 pm »
https://spacenews.com/planet-pelican-details/

The replacement for SkySat-Pelican will offer at least 10 daily views of Earth’s land mass and as many as 30 views of midlatitude locations with a resolution of 30 centimeters per pixel.

Ka-band inter-satellite data links

Will use other company's communication sat to relay data.

Hall-effect thrusters
It was matter of time before observation satellites starting using likes of Starlink for downlink. Downlink has always been bottle neck for these satellites plus high cost of maintaining ground stations.
In theory they can now download high definition video continuously.

In future most satellites will use these broadband constellations for communications.

Sent from my SM-G570Y using Tapatalk
« Last Edit: 04/21/2022 05:31 pm by TrevorMonty »

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