PlanetiQ and Blue
Canyon Technologies Partner to Transform Weather Satellite Industry
and Dramatically Improve Weather Forecasting
June 24, 2015
PlanetiQ has selected Blue Canyon
Technologies (BCT) out of
Boulder, Colo., to build its revolutionary weather
satellite constellation launching in 2016 and 2017. PlanetiQ chose
BCT as a partner in developing the world's first commercial
constellation dedicated to weather, climate and space weather based
on BCT's development track record and its cutting-edge, low-cost
design approach that has delivered hundreds of components and
systems for numerous space missions.
"Weather is the next commercial space
frontier, as demand grows not only for better forecasts of
day-to-day weather, severe storms and hurricanes, but also for
weather and climate data solutions that enhance weather readiness,
support risk management and increase business intelligence," said
Anne Hale Miglarese, President
and CEO of PlanetiQ. "Together, PlanetiQ and BCT bring the
innovation, technical expertise and experience to cost-effectively
produce the high-quality data needed to transform the weather
satellite industry and deliver unprecedented economic value."
PlanetiQ has co-located its aerospace
engineering team at BCT's
Boulder facilities, where both the satellites and
sensors will be manufactured and integrated, and is already working
side-by-side with BCT on the initial set of 12 microsatellites.
Working together with the PlanetiQ team, BCT has dramatically
reduced the satellite size and weight without sacrificing any
instrument capabilities.
"We are certainly pleased to be chosen by
PlanetiQ. Weather is emerging as a major growth sector for
aerospace, and our partnership with PlanetiQ positions BCT and the
state of
Colorado to play a leading role," said
George Stafford, President and
CEO of BCT. "Our systems and components match well with PlanetiQ's
instrument requirements, and we are glad to be working on this
spacecraft and mission."
PlanetiQ recently announced the successful
testing of its first "Pyxis" weather sensor and is setting up for
production with BCT. Pyxis collects dense, precise measurements of
global temperature, pressure and water vapor -- similar to data
collected by weather balloons but on a global scale -- using a
technique called GPS Radio Occultation (GPS-RO). Among the satellite
data sources currently ingested into computer weather models, GPS-RO
has shown the most cost-effective, highest impact per observation on
forecast accuracy. But only a sparse amount of GPS-RO data exists
today.
Pyxis is the only GPS-RO sensor in such a
small package that is powerful enough to provide more than 10 times
the amount of data available from GPS-RO sensors currently on orbit,
and to routinely probe down into the lowest layers of the atmosphere
where severe weather occurs.
"The small size and weight of the Pyxis
sensor -- combined with BCT's high-performance mission experience --
will allow us to quickly field a constellation to provide the
highest quality, most cost-effective weather data ever available,"
said PlanetiQ Founder
Chris McCormick, who leads
PlanetiQ's instrument team and developed the sensors for the only
GPS-RO constellation that has provided operational weather forecast
data. "With 12 satellites providing 8 million data points per day,
GPS-RO will easily become the most important contributor to weather
forecast accuracy at a fraction of the cost of traditional weather
satellites."