All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
Synspective previously completed a funding round nearly three years earlier that brought the amount raised by the company to $100,000,000.
With a total of $200,000,000 raised to date, Synspective is among the largest startups in Japan in any industry.
Choun Chee Kong, head of Japan investments for Pavilion Capital, supports Synspective's involvement in disaster mitigation through developing and operating SAR satellites and providing solution services that utilize SAR data.
Synspective has launched two satellites to date: StriX α in 2020-12-01 and StriX β on 2022-02-28.
Synspective Inc. raised $100,000,000 (11,900,000,000 JPY) in a funding round that included a Series B.
Synspective’s total funding since founding is $200,000,000 (22,800,000,000 JPY).
Synspective aims to establish a constellation of 30 SAR satellites around 2026 to enable wide-area, high-frequency Earth observation.
Synspective develops and operates high-frequency, high-resolution synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellites to provide data analytics and solution services.
Synspective launched the StriX-β satellite on 2022-03-01.
Synspective’s Land Displacement Monitoring (LDM) service monitored over 400 km2 of slope area in the upstream proximity of the Melamchi River using data gathered by the European Space Agency’s SAR satellite.
A helicopter survey conducted five months after the 2021-06-15 disaster corroborated Synspective’s InSAR-based findings in the Melamchi area.
Synspective used Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data and time-series interferometric SAR (InSAR) analysis–based Earth observation techniques to monitor slope susceptibility and identify potential precursors of slow-evolving failure conditions.
Synspective’s LDM service monitored over 400 square kilometers of slope area in the upstream proximity of the Melamchi River using data from the European Space Agency’s SAR satellite.
The 2022-02-28 mission was the first launch under a three-launch contract signed in late 2021 between Rocket Lab and Synspective.
Rocket Lab deployed the StriX β satellite for Synspective nearly an hour after liftoff on 2022-02-28.
Rocket Lab launched Synspective’s first satellite, StriX α, in December 2020.
Synspective plans a constellation of 30 SAR satellites designed to detect millimeter-level changes to the Earth’s surface independent of weather and time of day.
Rocket Lab is scheduled to launch another Synspective mission in 2022 and a third Synspective mission in 2023.
Rocket Lab signed a three-launch contract with Synspective in late 2021.
Rocket Lab has deployed a second Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellite to orbit for Synspective.