A New Satellite Can Peer Inside Buildings, Day or Night

The resolution is so crisp that you can see inside individual rooms.

Dan Robitzskia day ago

https://futurism.com/new-satellite-buildings-day-night

A few months ago, a company called Capella Space launched a satellite capable 
of taking clear radar images of anywhere in the world, with incredible 
resolution — even through the walls of some buildings.

And unlike most of the huge array of surveillance and observational satellites 
orbiting the Earth, its satellite Capella 2 can snap a clear picture during 
night or day, rain or shine.

“It turns out that half of the world is in nighttime, and half of the world, on 
average, is cloudy,” CEO Payam Banazadeh, a former system engineer at the NASA 
Jet Propulsion laboratory, told Futurism. “When you combine those two together, 
about 75 percent of Earth, at any given time, is going to be cloudy, nighttime, 
or it’s going to be both. It’s invisible to you, and that portion is moving 
around.”

On Wednesday, Capella launched a platform allowing governmental or private 
customers to request images of anything in the world — a capability that will 
only get more powerful with the deployment of six additional satellites next 
year. Is that creepy from a privacy point of view? Sure. But Banazadeh says 
that it also plugs numerous holes in the ways scientists and government 
agencies are currently able to monitor the planet.

“There’s a bunch of gaps in how we’re currently observing Earth from space — 
the majority of the sensors we use to observe earth are optical imaging 
sensors,” he said. “If it’s cloudy, you’re going to see the clouds, not what’s 
happening under the clouds. And if there’s not much light, you’re going to have 
a really hard time getting an image that is useful.”

By contrast, Capella can peer right through cloud cover, and see just as well 
in the daylight as in total darkness. That’s because instead of optical 
imaging, it uses synthetic aperture radar, or SAR.


Roswell International Air Center, New Mexico. SAR imagery provided by Capella 
Space.
SAR works similarly to how dolphins and bats navigate using echolocation. The 
satellite beams down a powerful 9.65 GHz radio signal toward its target, and 
then collects and interprets the signal as it bounces back up into orbit. And 
because the satellite is sending down its own signal rather than passively 
capturing light, sometimes those signals can even penetrate right through a 
building’s wall, peering at the interior like Superman’s X-ray vision.

“At that frequency, the clouds are pretty much transparent,” Banazadeh told 
Futurism. “You can penetrate clouds, fog, moisture, smoke, haze. Those things 
don’t matter anymore. And because you’re generating your own signal, it’s as if 
you’re carrying a flashlight. You don’t care if it’s day or night.”

Capella didn’t invent SAR. But Banazadeh says it’s the first U.S. company to 
offer the technology, and the first worldwide to offer a more accessible 
platform for potential customers to use.

“Part of the challenge in this industry is that working with satellite imagery 
providers has been difficult,” he explained. “You might have to send a bunch of 
emails to find out how they could collect images for you. In some instances, 
you might have to send a fax.”

Another innovation, he says, is the resolution at which Capella’s satellites 
can collect imagery. Each pixel in one of the satellite’s images represents a 
50-centimeter-by-50-centimeter square, while other SAR satellites on the market 
can only get down to around five meters. When it comes to actually discerning 
what you’re looking at from space, that makes a huge difference.

Cityscapes are particularly intriguing. Skyscrapers poke out of the Earth like 
ghostly, angular mushrooms — and, if you look carefully, you notice that you 
can see straight through some of them. You won’t be able to on the below image 
because it’s too compressed, but Banazadeh said that the original image was so 
detailed you could check out individual rooms.


Tokyo. SAR imagery provided by Capella Space.
Right now, that’s as good a resolution as is possible with SAR. Not because of 
technological limitations — Capella hopes to improve with subsequent satellite 
launches down the road — but because of U.S. law.

And interestingly, that resolution cap is the only limit that the law places on 
services like Capella’s. As long as the company don’t improve the resolution a 
hair beyond what it’s at now, Banazadeh said its satellites can image any part 
of the world that a paying customer asks for — even technically the inside of a 
home.

Those customers, he explained, could be government agencies monitoring a 
hostile military for movement or tracking an airport for activity. That’s where 
that wall-penetrating vision comes into play. Banazadeh gave the example of an 
airport where planes hidden under a canopy became clear as day thanks to SAR 
satellites. The customers may also be scientists peering through the thick 
clouds of the Amazon rainforest to track deforestation, or even investors 
checking up on global supply chains.

Possibilities abound. Train two SAR satellites on the same target and they can 
actually image targets in three dimensions down to minute differences in 
height. Banazadeh said one group is already using that trick to measure how 
much oil is being stored in open-top oil tanks or how much is being extracted 
from an open-pit mine on a given day — and using that information as a proxy 
for the value of various commodities. That can also help authorities monitor 
infrastructure for possible safety issues: SAR can track how much the ground 
above a tunnel sinks over time, for example.

“We’re making it very easy for people with all sorts of backgrounds to interact 
with a company like us, and that inevitably is going to bring a more users that 
previously couldn’t access this market,” Banazadeh said. “That’s our hope.”
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