Proba-V tracking aircraft in flight from orbit

13 June 2013 - ESA's Proba-V has become the first satellite to pick up aircraft tracking signals, allowing aircraft across the globe to be followed in flight from space. "We have succeeded in proving that these relatively low-powered air traffic control signals can indeed be detected from space as they are, without any need for upgraded aircraft equipment," explained Toni Delovski of the DLR German Aerospace Center, overseeing the experiment. "Now we want to go on and check how many aircraft we can actually observe in practice, and which types - different sized aircraft being assigned systems with differing signal strengths. "This research opens the way to operational space-based aircraft monitoring in future." Launched on 7 May, Proba-V's main task is to map vegetation growth, covering the whole world every two days. But the minisatellite - smaller than a cubic metre - also doubles as a miniature research lab, testing a number of promising technologies in space. These 'guest payloads' include an experiment to detect Automatic Dependent Broadcast - Surveillance (ADS-B) signals from aircraft, contributed to the mission by DLR in cooperation with Luxembourg's SES TechCom. ADS-B signals are regularly broadcast from equipped aircraft, giving flight information such as speed, position and altitude.
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