The word ‘satellite’ might not be one which immediately springs to mind when you think about Canon, but we’ve been in the space industry for around fifteen years and transmitting incredible images back to earth from small but powerful micro-satellites since 2017.
At just 500mm x 500mm x 850mm, our first – the CE-SAT-I – comes in barely bigger than a piece of carry-on luggage, but it’s loaded with an image processing system which can count cars from a low- earth orbit of 500km. Held securely within its chassis is a combination of our Canon EOS 5D Mark III camera and a 400mm diameter Catadioptric Cassegrain telescope, as well as a PowerShot compact digital camera.
Since then, our team at Canon Electronics in Japan have launched two further image-capturing satellites. In 2020, the CE-SAT-IIB took an unreleased ultra-high-sensitivity camera to space, alongside a Canon EOS M100 and a PowerShot G9 X Mark II. In early 2024, the CE-SAT-IE joined the pair in orbit. Designed to capture both still images and video, it carries a Canon 365bet体育投注_365bet体育娱乐场-app官方下载@5 (attached to a 400mm aperture telescope) and a PowerShot S110.
Together, the trio continually send images back to earth providing geospatial information for everything from earth mapping to traffic management, agricultural and aquacultural monitoring.
However, as useful as these images are, there’s also something just plain magical about seeing the places we know captured from hundreds of kilometres above the earth. So, our image galleries below contain plenty of familiar places – albeit shown in very unfamiliar ways – but we’ve also included views of some glorious celestial objects, and the Moon and Mars, in all their cosmic drama and beauty.
Ultra High Sensitivity Camera (from the CE-SAT-IIB)
EOS M100 (from the CE-SAT-IIB)
EOS 5D Mark III (from the CE-SAT-1)
PowerShot SS10 (from the CE-SAT-IE)
Images used with kind permission from Canon Electronics Inc.
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