LANDSAT 7 is a remote sensing spacecraft operated for the United States Geological Survey (USGS). Built for NASA, it was launched APRIL 15, 1999. Landsat 7 is the seventh spacecraft in the Landsat series and is dedicated to capturing images of the changing Earth for use in many fields of study and application. Landsat 7 is continually adding to a database containing images of every piece of land on the planet. USGS is responsible for Landsat 7 operations, data processing, archive and distribution. In addition to the U.S. archive of global images, many countries have agreements with USGS to receive data from the Landsat 7 spacecraft directly.

The Flight Operations Team (FOT) is responsible for all command control and telemetry operations with the satellite. In addition, we provide offline engineering support, anomaly response, performance analysis for the satellite, orbit determination and maintenance, and planning and scheduling of system (spacecraft and ground) resources.

Prior to launch, we were responsible for learning the satellite and ground system designs and making sure all necessary command procedures and telemetry displays were generated. We also executed tests in order to check out the operability of the ground system and certain operational characteristics of the satellite, as well as further our own training.


This page is not sanctioned by Landsat 7 management and in no way is meant to be an official source of information for the Landsat 7 project and the views expresses here do not necessarily represent those of NASA or USGS.
Please go to http://landsat7.usgs.gov/index.html for the Official Landsat 7 web pages hosted by USGS.


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This page was last updated on May 5, 2003. Please e-mail comments to Tom Cooke at thomas.cooke@gsfc.nasa.gov

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