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Presenter Information

Thomas J. Schwab, Lockheed Martin

Session

Technical Session I: All Systems Go!

Abstract

Today each Small Satellite system has a “stove pipe” approach to exposing their requests for tasking and sensor observations / products to the end user. This approach is cost effective from the satellite operator perspective but from an end user perspective the costs can get very expensive when integrating multiple satellite systems, airborne and in-situ sensors. The Group on Earth Observations (GEO) disaster management mission space is an example where multiple sensor systems are needed and integrating the data is critical piece for mission success. GEO and the Small Satellite community can utilize an existing Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC®) Sensor Web Enablement (SWE) international standard, started in 1999, to address and reduce integration costs with new and legacy end-user systems. The OGC® mission is “To serve as a global forum for the collaboration of developers and users of spatial data products and services, and to advance the development of international standards for geospatial interoperability.” This paper makes recommendations for moving forward and provides details on how to reduce costs of implementing the OGC® SWE though government and commercial open software efforts. For additional interoperability improvements we also seek to advance the OGC® SWE standards to meet mission requirements. Encourage the use of OGC® SWE standards over proprietary solutions throughout the Small Satellite Community to expose their sensor observations, request collection, provide feasibility analysis, and collection request tracking to new and legacy systems, thus enabling a federated Small Satellite information enterprise.

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Aug 10th, 3:30 PM

Implementing a Small Satellite Information Enterprise Using a Modular Open Architecture Approach Based on International Standards

Today each Small Satellite system has a “stove pipe” approach to exposing their requests for tasking and sensor observations / products to the end user. This approach is cost effective from the satellite operator perspective but from an end user perspective the costs can get very expensive when integrating multiple satellite systems, airborne and in-situ sensors. The Group on Earth Observations (GEO) disaster management mission space is an example where multiple sensor systems are needed and integrating the data is critical piece for mission success. GEO and the Small Satellite community can utilize an existing Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC®) Sensor Web Enablement (SWE) international standard, started in 1999, to address and reduce integration costs with new and legacy end-user systems. The OGC® mission is “To serve as a global forum for the collaboration of developers and users of spatial data products and services, and to advance the development of international standards for geospatial interoperability.” This paper makes recommendations for moving forward and provides details on how to reduce costs of implementing the OGC® SWE though government and commercial open software efforts. For additional interoperability improvements we also seek to advance the OGC® SWE standards to meet mission requirements. Encourage the use of OGC® SWE standards over proprietary solutions throughout the Small Satellite Community to expose their sensor observations, request collection, provide feasibility analysis, and collection request tracking to new and legacy systems, thus enabling a federated Small Satellite information enterprise.