Health & Fitness
Landsat - NASA's New Satellite
Landsat is a satellite that photographs the entire earth, excluding the poles, every 16 days.

I’ve been working at the Pacific Science Center - Dicovery Corps TESSA, since this summer. Recently a co-worker and I were asked to create a digital media presentation about Landsat. We picked out pictures from the NASA website and videos from YouTube. Our pictures included a timeline of Landsat, showing how it progressed and updated over the years as well as the dates that the satellite launched. We also had a picture of the satellite which we used to talk about the structure of Landsat.
Landsat is a satellite that monitors cartography, agriculture, forestry, geology, surveillance, regional planning, national security and education applications. But its main mission is to provide a detailed record of the global and environmental changes of the earth over the years. With over 40 years worth of data, the Landsat program is the longest continuous global record of the Earth's surface. There have been eight updates to the original Landsat. The newest one, Landsat Data Continuity Mission (LDCM) 8, was launched on February 11th from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.
What I find pretty cool is that Landsat circles the earth every 98.9 minutes, goes around the earth 14 times a day, and it covers the entire globe every 16 days. Which basically means it photographs the entire earth, excluding the poles, every 16 days. Because it does a North to South rotation, around the poles, it takes a shorter amount of time then if it went around the equator. At the launch, the satellite weighed 4,566 lbs (2,071 kg) when it was fully loaded with fuel and without the instruments. Landsat is about 9.8 ft long and 7.9 ft in diameter.
The latest Landsat uses new technology, for example, solar panels and a Thermal Infrared Sensor (TIRS). The solar panels fold out from the satellite when it starts orbiting earth. Landsat also has a golden foil around it to reflect the heat off of, so its delicate insides don’t get damaged and the sun’s radiation doesn’t destroy it.
You might wonder what Landsat does to help you. Landsat provides the satellite view of Google and Bing’s maps and Google Earth. It also helps people in agriculture; because of Landsat farmers don’t have to pay hundreds or maybe even thousands of dollars to send surveyors out to take pictures of their crops. Politicians use Landsat to monitor national security. Geologists use it to examine rock faces and mountains.
Overall, Landsat is useful for many different people in different fields. Even if you don’t use it for work. Next time you use Google/Bing maps think about the amount of work, and energy it took for one little satellite to go up into space so you can view your instructions.