Cold War Satellite Imagery Gets New Life

Mitch Leslie

PDF(1370 KB)
PDF(1370 KB)
Engineering ›› 2021, Vol. 7 ›› Issue (6) : 709-711. DOI: 10.1016/j.eng.2021.04.004

Cold War Satellite Imagery Gets New Life

Author information +
History +

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Mitch Leslie. Cold War Satellite Imagery Gets New Life. Engineering, 2021, 7(6): 709‒711 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eng.2021.04.004

References

[[1]]
Rendenieks Z, Nita MD, Nikodemus O, Radeloff VC. Half a century of forest cover change along the Latvian–Russian border captured by object-based image analysis of Corona and Landsat TM/OLI data. Remote Sens Environ 2020;249:112010.
[[2]]
Renault M. It spied on Soviet atomic bombs. Now it’s solving ecological mysteries [Internet]. New York: New York Times; 2021 Jan 5 [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/05/science/coronasatellites-environment.html.
[[3]]
Foley T. Corona comes in from the cold [Internet]. Arlington: Air Force Magazine; 1995 Sep 1 [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://www. airforcemag.com/article/0995corona/.
[[4]]
Vergano D. Cold War spy-satellite images unveil lost cities [Internet]. Washington, DC: National Geographic; 2014 Apr 26 [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/article/ 140425-corona-spy-satellite-archaeology-science.
[[5]]
Goerlich F, Bolch T, Mukherjee K, Pieczonka T. Glacier mass loss during the 1960s and 1970s in the Ak-Shirak Range (Kyrgyzstan) from multiple stereoscopic Corona and Hexagon imagery. Remote Sens 2017;9(3):275.
[[6]]
Livingston S. Cold War satellites inadvertently tracked species declines [Internet]. Washington, DC: Science; 2020 May 19 [cited 2021 Mar 3]. Available from: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/05/cold-warsatellites-inadvertently-tracked-species-declines.
[[7]]
Historical image declassification fact sheet [Internet]. Chantilly: National Reconnaissance Office; [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://www.nro. gov/History-and-Studies/Center-for-the-Study-of-National-Reconnaissance/ The-CORONA-Program/Fact-Sheet/.
[[8]]
Wall M. Sputnik 1! 7 fun facts about humanity’s first satellite [Internet]. New York: Space; 2020 Oct 4 [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://www. space.com/38331-sputnik-satellite-fun-facts.html.
[[9]]
Zak A. How Sputnik worked [Internet]. New York: Popular Mechanics; 2017 Oct 4 [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://www. popularmechanics.com/space/satellites/news/a28496/how-sputnik-worked/.
[[10]]
Clausen I. Reflections on Corona’s tough challenges. In: Clausen I, Miller EA, editors. Intelligence Revolution 1960: Retrieving the Intelligence Imagery that Helped Win the Cold War. Chantilly: National Reconnaissance Office; 2012.
[[11]]
Minoru SA. The agena booster platform challenges. In: Clausen I, Miller EA, editors. Intelligence revolution 1960: retrieving the intelligence imagery that helped win the Cold War. Chantilly: National Reconnaissance Office; 2012.
[[12]]
Smith KN. The quest to make space telescopes smaller [Internet]. New York: Forbes; 2020 Jun 3 [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://www. forbes.com/sites/kionasmith/2020/06/03/the-quest-to-make-space-telescopessmaller/?sh=7fc1020e2278.
[[13]]
Basics of space flight: attitude and articulation control subsystems (AACS) [Internet]. Washington, DC: National Aeronautics and Space Administration; [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/basics/ chapter11-2/.
[[14]]
Oberhaus D. The first spy satellites had to drop gigantic buckets of film back to Earth [Internet]. New York: Vice; 2017 Apr 22 [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://www.vice.com/en/article/jpzpkg/the-first-spy-satellites-had-todrop-gigantic-buckets-of-film-back-to-earth.
[[15]]
Declassified intelligence satellite photographs fact sheet 2008–3054. Washington, DC: US Geological Survey; 2008 Jul.
[[16]]
Casana J, Cothren J, Kalayci T. Swords into ploughshares: archaeological applications of CORONA satellite imagery in the Middle East. Internet Archaeol 2012:32.
[[17]]
Wheelon AD. Corona: the first reconnaissance satellites. Phys Today 1997;50 (2):24.
[[18]]
Dienemann M, Christopher G. First man-made object to eject, stabilize, and propel itself to de-orbit a payload. In: Clausen I, Miller EA, editors. Intelligence revolution 1960: retrieving the intelligence imagery that helped win the Cold War. Chantilly: National Reconnaissance Office; 2012.
[[19]]
Landsat 1 [Internet]. Washington, DC: United States Geological Survey; [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://www.usgs.gov/core-science-systems/ nli/landsat/landsat-1.
[[20]]
Noble WJ. satellites uncover ancient mideast road networks [Internet]. New York: New York Times; 2003 Jan 28 [cited 2021 Mar 9]. Available from: https://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/28/science/satellites-uncover-ancientmideast-road-networks.html.
[[21]]
Casana J. Global-scale archaeological prospection using CORONA satellite imagery: automated, crowd-sourced, and expert-led approaches. J Field Archaeol 2020;45(Suppl 1):S89–100.
PDF(1370 KB)

Accesses

Citations

Detail

Sections
Recommended

/