SatVu restarts commercial operations with HotSat-2
British thermal imaging startup SatVu announced the start of commercial services June 29 for HotSat-2, marking a return to revenue-generating operations after its debut satellite failed in low Earth orbit in 2023. The post SatVu restarts commercial operations with HotSat-2 appeared first on SpaceNews .
TAMPA, Fla. — British thermal imaging startup SatVu announced the start of commercial services June 29 for HotSat-2, marking a return to revenue-generating operations after its debut satellite failed in low Earth orbit in 2023.
HotSat-2 is now routinely delivering mid-wave infrared imagery to government and commercial customers following its launch in March, the company said, including for Norwegian defense and aerospace giant Kongsberg’s geospatial intelligence services.
“Many of our original HotSat-1 customers have recommitted to HotSat-2, with further announcements to come,” SatVu CEO and cofounder Anthony Baker told SpaceNews.
“We’ve used the time between the two missions to refine our products and customer service, including improved calibration that lets customers measure thermal change across a timeseries of imagery.”
“Our first-light images demonstrated how high-resolution infrared delivers new and improved insight into thermal activity,” Baker said.
“In the weeks since, we’ve been rehearsing service delivery to meet customer expectations from day one, and improving image quality through careful calibration of the detector.”
SatVu earlier said the 160-kilogram HotSat-1 demonstrator, built by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd. (SSTL), likely suffered a power circuit issue.
“We’re satisfied that extensive efforts were made to investigate the root cause and take corrective action, alongside exhaustive testing of the whole satellite,” Baker said.
SSTL also built HotSat-2 and is constructing another spacecraft, HotSat-3, which he said is being prepared to ship for launch later this year to increase capacity and improve revisit rates.
Construction work has also already started on follow-on spacecraft, Baker added, toward a constellation of 10 or more satellites to meet anticipated demand.
Jason Rainbow writes about satellite telecom, finance and commercial markets for SpaceNews. He has spent more than a decade covering the global space industry as a business journalist. Previously, he was Group Editor-in-Chief for Finance Information Group,... More by Jason Rainbow
📌 Kaynak
Bu haber XML kaynağından derlenmiştir. Tamamı için orijinal habere gidin.
Orijinal haberi oku →