Astrium signs contract
with Korean Aerospace Research Institute
24 July 2013
Astrium, has recently
signed a contract with the Korea Aerospace
Research Institute (KARI), the South Korean
space agency. Under the terms of this contract,
Astrium and KARI will jointly design and
manufacture the Geostationary Ocean Color Imager
II (GOCI-II) for the future Korean mission GEO
Kompsat 2B, scheduled for launch in 2019.
“Astrium employees
will now have the opportunity to showcase their
knowledge and expertise by providing KARI with
one of the best oceanographic imagers in the
world,” said Eric Béranger, CEO of Astrium
Satellites. “This contract is also a great
commercial success for Astrium, confirming our
place as the world’s leading exporter of Earth
observation space systems.”
The GOCI-II instrument,
designed to provide detailed observations of the
colour of the seawater, will contribute to a
number of services associated with fishing,
ecology and meteorology. It will, for example,
be able to determine the amount of chlorophyll
in the water, differentiate plankton species,
identify algae proliferations and determine
available fishing resources.
GOCI-II is the next
generation to the GOCI first generation imager
onboard the COMS satellite. GOCI was also
developed by Astrium and has been successfully
operated by the South Korean space agency since
its launch in 2010. GOCI-II offers significant
advances in comparison to GOCI: enhanced
resolution (250 metres), 12 spectral bands and
daily coverage of full disk Earth data.
GOCI-II has been
designed using the latest generation
technologies developed by Astrium for space
applications, including a seven-million pixel
CMOS sensor, a silicon carbide telescope and a
high-precision pointing mechanism.
The contract signed
with KARI also stipulates that six Korean
engineers will help to develop the instrument at
the Astrium site in Toulouse. Astrium has agreed
to use South Korean industrial services
amounting to 5% of the contract price. In
addition, test resources made available by KARI
at its Daejeon site in Korea will be used for
environment testing.
This latest export
contract illustrates the excellent cooperation
between Astrium and KARI and is the fruit of
research and development work conducted by
Astrium for a number of years in the domain of
optical instrumentation.
Institutional space
programmes maintain and develop expertise and
give the company a competitive edge. This
competitiveness has enabled Astrium to become
the leading exporter worldwide of Earth
observation satellites, a position that also
benefits the European trade balance. In addition
to the Algerian satellite Alsat-2, Chilean
satellite SSOT and Vietnamese satellite
VNREDSat-1 launched respectively in July 2010,
December 2011 and May 2013, Astrium Satellites
is working on a number of Earth observation and
science programmes won following international
competition, including the DZZ-Kazakhstan
satellite. Contracts have also been signed to
equip Earth observation and science satellites
with Astrium-built reflectors and other critical
parts, including the gyroscopes that will be
used on the NASA NOAA JPSS mission.
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