DigitalGlobe Helps Create Drone Air Traffic Control

Data mined from DigitalGlobe‘s satellite images are at the center of a system that could change how drones operate in the U.S. and globally.

The Low Altitude Traffic and Airspace Safety, or LATAS, uses Verizon’s LTE cellular network, Harris’ satellite-based surveillance systems and information gleaned from Westminster-based DigitalGlobe’s high-resolution Earth imagery to help unmanned aerial vehicles — or UAVs, more commonly called drones — identify and avoid obstacles and safely navigate the airspace.

LATAS, developed by Raleigh, N.C.-based PrecisionHawk, recently completed initial testing and is under review by the Federal Aviation Administration and NASA.

Think of LATAS as air traffic control for flying robots, complete with social media integration — it has real-time tracking, a “geofencing” feature that won’t allow drone flight in prohibited airspaces, and even offers live streaming.

“Anybody can fly a drone — maybe not today, but it’s trending in that direction — and we need a technological solution to keep them from running into each other, people, bridges, buildings and even into aircraft,” Shay Har-Noy, DigitalGlobe’s senior director of Geospatial Big Data, said in an interview.

DigitalGlobe has undergone a self-described “strategy shift” in recent months to target new ways to make money from its imagery.

One of these growth areas is the Geospatial Big Data program, or GBD, which is expanding as new applications are discovered. Although Har-Noy could not specify exact numbers, he said this will definitely result in job gains in Colorado.

GBD harnesses the power of DigitalGlobe’s fleet of satellites, which capture photos of about 2 million square miles per day. Each image contains topographical and other information that can be used to guide LATAS.

“Instead of just these giant images of the state of Colorado, we can tell them where the trees are, where the water is, where the mountains are,” Har-Noy said. “There are all these kinds of very practical concerns you can now solve.”

For now, the next step for LATAS is to continue testing until it gains FAA blessing. The team has the ambitious goal to eventually develop and implement the system globally for safe, efficient operation of UAVs.

“We don’t have all the answers,” Har-Noy said. “We just want to have a path.”

DigitalGlobe currently employs 1,256 people — about 1,200 in Colorado — and about 380 contractors across eight locations worldwide. It recently moved into a new 482,000-square-foot Westminster headquarters.

Source: Denver Business Post

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