The Air Force launches latest its meteorological satellite designed to provide strategic and tactical weather predictions to aid the U.S. military.The U.S. Air Force launched its latest meteorological satellite Oct. 20.
The DMSP
(Defense Meteorological
Satellite Program) F-18 Block 5D-3 spacecraft accommodates
larger sensor payloads than earlier generations and is used for strategic and tactical weather
prediction to aid the U.S. military in planning operations at sea, on land and
in the air.
The F-18 Block satellites, built by Lockheed Martin, is equipped with a
sophisticated sensor suite that can image visible and infrared cloud cover and
measure precipitation, surface temperature and soil moisture. The satellite
collects specialized global meteorological, oceanographic and
solar-geophysical information in all weather conditions. The DMSP constellation
comprises two spacecraft in near-polar orbits; command, control and
communications; user terminals and weather centers.
"After several years of building, integrating, upgrading and
testing DMSP F-18...it was enormously satisfying to see this morning's launch and
hear that we have a healthy satellite on orbit that will carry out its vital
mission of supporting our war fighters," Sue Stretch, Lockheed Martin DMSP
program director, said in a statement. "Our partnership with the Air Force
dates to the very beginning of the DMSP program with a common goal of ensuring
that commanders have access to environmental data critical to the preparation
and execution of military operations."
Following DMSP F-18, two satellites
remain to be launched and are maintained at Space Systems' operations in Sunnyvale, Calif., for
storage, functional testing and upgrading. The spacecraft are shipped to
Vandenberg for launch when requested by the Air Force. Since 1965, 37 Lockheed
Martin DMSP satellites have been launched successfully by the U.S. Air Force.