Japan launches new satellite to survey disasters
May 31 TN
Japan successfully launched a new mapping satellite on Saturday that
will be used to survey damage from natural disasters and changes
affecting rainforests.
The Advanced Land Observing Satellite-2 (ALOS-2) will be able to see
scars left by catastrophes such as Japan's 2011 tsunami as well as
monitor progress made in reconstruction, officials from the Japan
Aerospace Exploration Agency said.ÓThe satellite was successfully put in
orbit,” said an official from Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, whose H-IIA
rocket was used in the launch from a space centre on the southern island
of Tanegashima.
The satellite will provide valuable data for Japan, which sits on the
Pacific Ring of Fire and experiences 20 percent of all major
earthquakes.
Memories are still fresh of the deadly 9.0-magnitude earthquake in
March 2011 that unleashed a tsunami that devastated the northern Pacific
coast, killing more than 18,000 people and triggering the Fukushima
nuclear crisis.The island nation is also routinely hit by typhoons while
scientists say Mount Fuji could erupt at any time.The new satellite,
nicknamed “Daichi-2”, will “conduct a health check mainly of the Earth's
land areas in detail,” JAXA project manager Shinichi Suzuki said.The
satellite will collect data related to deformation of the Earth's crust,
but also the impact of floods and landslides, he said.
The satellite's predecessor was used to monitor damage caused by the
2011 earthquake and tsunami. The device uses special radar to observe
the planet's surface at night, during bad weather and even through
vegetation.JAXA plans to use the new satellite to regularly study
tropical rain forests, which are difficult to observe because of the
thick clouds that frequently cover them. It will also be used to observe
snow and ice conditions in polar areas, officials said.
|