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Alaska Aviation Project Adopts IKONOS Satellite Imagery to Improve Navigation of Key Mountain Passes  E-mail
Written by Space Imaging   
20 August 2004
New Simulation and Training Modules Will Lower Aviation Accident Statistics within Alaska's 12 Key Air Transportation Corridors

DENVER, Aug. 19, 2004 - Space Imaging announced today that is has sold over $1.6 million of IKONOS satellite imagery to The Alaska Department of Veterans and Military Affairs (ADMVA) for the new Alaska Aviation Safety Project (AASP). The ADMVA has contracted with E-Terra, a leading GIS applications integrator, headquartered in Anchorage, to use the IKONOS imagery to develop accurate, flight simulation training modules of the 12 key mountain passes for the AASP. The new training modules will help Alaska meet the new Federal Aviation Administration's requirement of reducing the state's aviation accident statistics by 20 percent before 2008. The Medallion Foundation, a non-profit aviation safety organization that provides management resources, training and support to the commercial and private Alaskan aviation community, will also utilize the E-Terra training modules.

 

With a road system that is mostly unpaved, broken by mountain barriers and impassable under winter conditions, aviation is essential for internal Alaskan commerce and travel. Alaska is one of the world's most heavily aviation-dependent regions, with approximately 600 public airports and more than 3,000 airstrips. But, dependence upon aviation comes with a price. Although Alaska has approximately 10 percent of the nation's air carriers or commercial operators, it generates 35 percent of the nation's air carrier and commercial operator accidents. A disproportionate number of these accidents occur when pilots fly one of these 12 key mountain passes, most of which connect Anchorage with the Alaskan interior.

 

"The Alaska Aviation Safety Project's use of IKONOS high-resolution satellite imagery provides pilots an exact virtual 3-D image of what they will experience when they fly through these passes," states Major General Craig Campbell, commissioner of ADMVA. "These training modules will prepare pilots to safely travel through these dangerous passes and lower the risk factor for accidents."

 

Most of the aviation accidents that occur within the mountainous air corridors are due to inaccurate terrain data, and the slow adaptation of pilots in using new technologies to better prepare for flights. Traditional simulation tools for these passes, such as Microsoft Flight Simulator(tm), do not portray the terrain with sufficient accuracy. Use of IKONOS imagery is a dramatic step forward and provides pilots a more realistic visualization of each of the 12 passes. Pilots now have the ability to train flying through the 12 dangerous passes with a 3D simulation of the exact mountainous terrain.

 

"Utilizing satellite imagery in simulation training is an important aspect of future military and civil aviation applications," said Gene Colabatistto, executive vice president of Solutions at Space Imaging.

 

E-Terra has already completed two of the 12 simulation training modules with the remaining 10 to be finished within six months. In developing the first two modules, several types of three-dimensional visualizations were created, from animations with two and three-dimensional viewing capabilities to full free-flight simulations and cockpit control. While the types of three-dimensional visualization technologies used were different, these visualizations involved fly-through views of Lake Clark Pass and Merrill Pass. All of the three-dimensional visualizations were created by overlaying two types of remote sensing data: IKONOS satellite imagery draped over digital elevation models from IfSAR (Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar) aircraft-mounted sensors collected by Intermap.

 

"We are excited to partner with E-Terra to provide ADMVA an advanced simulation training module that prepares pilots to safely fly through some of the most dangerous passes in the world," said Howard Klayman, Space Imaging's director Customer Service and Channel Partner Operations. "The combination of Space Imaging and E-Terra is a great example of how advanced technologies compliment each other to provide customers the best solution available."

 

About Space Imaging
Space Imaging is the premier provider of satellite imagery enabling businesses, governments and individuals to better map, measure, monitor and manage the world in which we live. Based near Denver, Colo., Space Imaging radically transformed the Earth information market when in 1999 it launched IKONOS, the world's first commercial high-resolution imaging satellite. Today, Space Imaging's products are the cornerstone of the remote-sensing industry. The company supplies the highest quality, most accurate, visual information about the planet's changing natural and cultural features. Space Imaging's customer-centric business lines include imagery from satellites and aircraft, decision-support geospatial solutions, and direct access to its satellites for corporations and governments. With 2003 revenues exceeding $200 million, Space Imaging is a privately held company with partners, resellers and 12 affiliate ground stations around the world. For more information on products and services, please visit www.spaceimaging.com.

 
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