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EARTH OBSERVATION
Pixxel to launch the world's highest resolution hyperspectral smallsat constellation
by Staff Writers
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Mar 18, 2021

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Pixxel, an emerging leader in cutting edge earth-imaging technology, announced the close of a $7.3M seed round with new capital from Omnivore VC, Techstars, and others, who are joining alongside Lightspeed Ventures, Blume, growX, Ryan Johnson, former President at Planet Labs, and additional industry leaders.

Additionally, for the first time today, Pixxel came out of stealth and publicly announced its mission to build the world's highest resolution hyperspectral satellite constellation. The company's first hyperspectral satellite will launch within the next few months.

"We are very excited to finally speak about what we are building at Pixxel. Our new funding enables us to build a health monitor for the planet through the world's most advanced hyperspectral small-satellites.

"This enables us to capture some of the richest imagery that's ever been beamed down to earth," shared Awais Ahmed, co-founder and CEO of Pixxel. "These hyperspectral satellites will allow society to tackle many of humanity's most pressing issues and we believe they will become the holy grail of remote sensing - providing the best combination of spatial, temporal and spectral resolutions to date and empowering humans to see the earth like never before."

Compared to the common multispectral satellites prevalent today, Pixxel's hyperspectral earth-imaging satellites are able to beam down 50x more information by capturing light reflected in far more detail and using narrower bands beyond just red, green and blue.

This technology allows Pixxel to capture exact chemical signatures and offers more accurate solutions to previously unsolvable issues in industries such as agriculture, energy and environmental conservation. Once deployed, Pixxel's constellation will provide 24-hour global coverage in higher quality resolution and at a lower cost than any existing satellite competitors.

Hyperspectral imaging has the power to help with pressing issues that are invisible to today's satellites such as flagging pest infestations and crop diseases, tackling air and water pollution levels and detecting oil spills and gas leaks. Pixxel's imagery and platform provide a one-stop shop for geo-spatial insights.

"Hyperspectral imaging is the next frontier in the $400B+ space industry and Pixxel has proven it can build the hardware and software to be the leader in this category," said Ryan Johnson, investor in Pixxel and former CEO at Blackbridge, operators of the Rapidye satellite constellation.

"Having the best possible imaging technology in space will be critical to understanding our planet and making life more sustainable. I'm very excited to be a part of Pixxel and help them in this journey."

Today's funding marks the close of Pixxel's $7.3M seed round and follows significant technical, commercial, and team momentum bringing onboard some marquee investors such as Lightspeed Ventures and Techstars.

This additional funding will enable Pixxel to continue to rapidly scale its operations to meet the growing demand of high quality remote sensing data through hyperspectral imaging. To date, Pixxel has built partnerships and worked alongside the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), Maxar, and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).


Related Links
Pixxel
Earth Observation News - Suppiliers, Technology and Application


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EARTH OBSERVATION
When North was South, and South was North
Bethesda MD (SPX) Mar 16, 2021
About a hundred years ago, geologists first noticed that some volcanic rocks were magnetized opposite to the direction of the local Earth's magnetic field. Thus, the concept of magnetic field reversal was born. Estimates regarding the timing of magnetic field reversals were made about that same time and scientists initially thought that this phenomenon had occurred by the early Pleistocene age. Over the next 30 years, with a better understanding of the Earth's magnetic field, theories were advance ... read more

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