- Advanced Land Observing Satellite | NASA Earthdata
NASA's Advanced Land Observing Satellite (ALOS) was developed to contribute to the fields of mapping, precise regional land-coverage observation, disaster monitoring, and resource surveying
- ALOS@EORC Homepage
Follow-on mission of L-band SAR from "DAICHI" (ALOS), which contributes for a variety of purposes, including disaster monitoring, forest distribution, and analysis of crustal movement
- ALOS-1 - Earth Online
The Advanced Land Observing Satellite (ALOS-1) was a Japanese Earth-imaging satellite from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) that launched on 24 January 2006 and completed its operational phase on 12 May 2011 after failing due to a power anomaly
- Advanced Land Observing Satellite - Wikipedia
Advanced Land Observing Satellite (ALOS), also called Daichi (a Japanese word meaning "land"), was a 3810 kg Japanese satellite launched in 2006 After five years of service, the satellite lost power and ceased communication with Earth, but remains in orbit
- ALOS-4 (Advanced Land Observing Satellite-4 ) - eoPortal
<p>The Advanced Land Observing Satellite-4 (ALOS-4) is a Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) mission aimed at observing and monitoring disaster-hit areas, forests, sea-ice, and monitoring infrastructure displacement
- ALOS-4 ALOS-2 Data Distribution | PASCO CORPORATION
The ALOS-2 stands for Advanced Land Observing Satellite 2, launched by Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) on May 2014 The Japanese name is DAICHI-2 This site will guide your purchase of satellite imagery of ALOS-4 and ALOS-2
- ALOS Satellite Mission Summary | CEOS Database
A summary of the Advanced Land Observing Satellite (ALOS) Earth observation satellite mission from Committee on Earth Observing Satellites (CEOS) Mission status: mission complete, was launched on 24 January 2006, and ended on 22 April 2011 Operated by JAXA Instruments: AVNIR-2, PALSAR, PRISM
- H3 launches ALOS-4 advanced Earth observation satellite
ALOS-4 will be used for observing and monitoring disaster-hit areas, forests, and sea ice It will also challenge new areas such as monitoring infrastructure displacement, according to JAXA
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