Les satellites (Satellites)
In: Revue française d'administration publique: publication trimestrielle, Heft 52, S. 65
ISSN: 0152-7401
12722 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Revue française d'administration publique: publication trimestrielle, Heft 52, S. 65
ISSN: 0152-7401
In: Arms Control Verification Occasional Papers, No. 7
World Affairs Online
In: The army quarterly and defence journal, Band 107, S. 291-297
ISSN: 0004-2552
In: Informationen zur politischen Bildung 76/77
In: Planeten, Raketen, Satelliten Teil III
In: RUSI journal, Band 133, Heft 4, S. 48-54
ISSN: 0307-1847
World Affairs Online
In: Environmental Science, Engineering and Technology
Intro -- ENVIRONMENTAL SATELLITES: FEATURES AND ACQUISITION PLANS -- ENVIRONMENTAL SATELLITES: FEATURES AND ACQUISITION PLANS -- Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE -- Chapter 1: GEOSTATIONARY OPERATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL SATELLITES: IMPROVEMENTS NEEDED IN CONTINUITY PLANNING AND INVOLVEMENT OF KEY USERS -- WHY GAO DID THIS STUDY -- WHAT GAO FOUND -- ABBREVIATIONS -- BACKGROUND -- Overview of the GOES-R Program -- Acquisition Strategy -- Program Office Structure -- Prior Report Noted Challenges with Instrument Development and Recommended Steps to Improve Management and Oversight -- GOES-R IS IN DEVELOPMENT, BUT DELAYS IN KEY PROGRAM MILESTONES HAVE ENDANGERED SATELLITE CONTINUITY -- Progress Continues to Be Made on GOES-R Procurement, but Much Work Remains to Be Completed on the Flight and Ground Projects -- Flight Project-Progress Made, but Two Instruments Have Experienced Technical Challenges -- Ground Project-Development Is Under Way, but Important Work Remains to Be Done -- Continued Delays in Launch Dates Put the Continuity of Satellite Operations at Risk -- NOAA HAS NOT ESTABLISHED ADEQUATE CONTINUITY PLANS FOR ITS GEOSTATIONARY SATELLITES -- NOAA'S EFFORTS TO INVOLVE EXTERNAL GOES DATA USERS, PRIORITIZE THEIR DATA NEEDS, AND COMMUNICATE PROGRAM STATUS HAVE SHORTFALLS -- Key GOES Data Users Have Been Identified, but Efforts to Involve Other Federal Agencies and Prioritize Their Data Needs Are Not Sufficient -- NOAA Has Not Effectively Communicated with Other Federal Agencies -- CONCLUSIONS -- RECOMMENDATIONS FOR EXECUTIVE ACTION -- AGENCY COMMENTS -- APPENDIX I: OBJECTIVES, SCOPE, AND METHODOLOGY -- End Notes -- End Notes for Appendix I -- Chapter 2: ENVIRONMENTAL SATELLITES: STRATEGY NEEDED TO SUSTAIN CRITICAL CLIMATE AND SPACE WEATHER MEASUREMENTS -- WHY GAO DID THIS STUDY -- WHAT GAO RECOMMENDS
In: The RUSI journal, Band 133, Heft 4, S. 48-54
ISSN: 1744-0378
In: Historical social research: HSR-Retrospective (HSR-Retro) = Historische Sozialforschung, Band 40, Heft 1, S. 239-264
ISSN: 2366-6846
"During the early Cold War, outer space became a politically contested space, and changes in its spatial perception were related to political and ideological controversies. The article highlights the specific relevance of Euclidean geometry in representations of outer space. Focusing on illustrations and expositions in both postwar German States, it argues that shifts within the spatial imagination and representation of space corresponded with the first satellite missions and condensed debates about the future of technology and the moral legacies of the Second World War. In October 1957, Sputnik I, the first artificial satellite to orbit the Earth and a Soviet construction, urged engineers, scientists, and illustrators to find new ways of depicting and communicating the spaces of outer space to the public and to each other. For decades, space fiction had implicitly stifled theories on the relativity of space and time by hinting at traditional motifs of conquest through machines. Early spaceflight, however, was not about immediate flights to other planets, but about the orbit, a space without a traditional place, yet imagined as being of paramount importance for strategic superiority. Driven by political tensions and drawing on representations established in physics and astronomy, the first satellite projects were designed and explained as missions to places that needed to be defined and controlled because they were strange and new." (author's abstract)
In: Military technology: Miltech, Band 42, Heft 4, S. 56-57
ISSN: 0722-3226
World Affairs Online
In: The world today, Band 51, Heft 10, S. 183
ISSN: 0043-9134
In: World armaments and disarmament, Band 1976, S, S. 102-119
ISSN: 0347-2205
World Affairs Online
In: Revue française d'administration publique, Band 52, Heft 1, S. 65-76
Satellites
Martine Georges
The distinction between the operational and regulatory functions in the satellite telecommunications sector is far more clearcut at the international level. A detailed analysis nevertheless reveals that in reality the regulations sometimes favour the notion of content, as in the case of broadcasting satellites, and at others that of support, as in the case of telecommunication satellites. The regulations governing the latter are insufficiently adapted to the growing diversity of services offered by satellite at a time when the effectiveness of the operational framework for satellite Systems as a whole is being called into question.
World Affairs Online