All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
NOAA awarded radio occultation data contracts to GeoOptics in February 2021, to Spire in August 2021, to Spire again in February 2022, and to PlanetIQ in April 2023.
NOAA awarded contracts last year to GeoOptics, PlanetiQ, and Spire to provide space weather data as part of a pilot program to test the value of commercial observations.
GeoOptics will process radio occultation data for NASA to a higher degree of accuracy than the data the company provides to NOAA for weather forecasting.
NASA awarded the GeoOptics contract on 2022-11-14.
Under the agreement, GeoOptics shall deliver a comprehensive catalog of its commercial Earth Observation data.
The NASA contract requires GeoOptics to deliver a comprehensive catalog of its data products including data sets, associated metadata and ancillary information, data cadence, data latency, area coverage, and data usage policy.
GeoOptics Inc. won a NASA contract worth a maximum of $7,000,000 over five years to provide researchers with data acquired by the company’s small satellite constellation.
NASA selected GeoOptics Inc. of Pasadena, California to provide commercial small constellation satellite data products.
Work under the agreement will be performed at GeoOptics’ facilities in Pasadena and other locations specified in individual calls.
GeoOptics has supplied radio occultation data to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration for weather forecasts since 2020.
Since 2020, NOAA has been purchasing radio occultation data from GeoOptics and Spire to improve terrestrial weather forecasts.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration awarded contracts to GeoOptics, PlanetIQ, and Spire Global to provide space weather data as part of a pilot program to test the value of commercial observations.
NOAA will evaluate data supplied by GeoOptics, PlanetIQ, and Spire over approximately 12 months.
Under the NOAA contracts, GeoOptics, PlanetIQ, and Spire will provide radio occultation datasets that reveal weather conditions in Earth’s ionosphere.
Terran Orbital flew satellites on Transporter-5 for customers including Fleet, GeoOptics, and NASA.
GeoOptics CICERO-2 Vehicles 1 and 2 constitute the first phase of the CICERO-2 next-generation satellite constellation intended to form a unified Earth observatory for climate change monitoring.
GeoOptics’s first-generation satellites were designed and developed by Tyvak Nano-Satellite Systems, a Terran Orbital Corporation.
Terran Orbital Corporation shipped two next-generation satellites from GeoOptics to Cape Canaveral for launch on SpaceX’s Transporter-5 mission.
GeoOptics’s first-generation satellites were designed and developed by Tyvak Nano-Satellite Systems, a Terran Orbital Corporation.
Terran Orbital shipped two next-generation satellites for GeoOptics to Cape Canaveral for launch on SpaceX’s Transporter-5 mission.