Asian Surveying & Mapping
Breaking News
South Korea is converting an abandoned coal mine into a moon exploration testing ground
South Korea is transforming abandoned coal mines into testing...
ISRO to Launch Chandrayaan-5 With Japan, Plans Space Station
Dr. V. Narayanan, Chairman of the Indian Space Research...
Russia and China are threatening SpaceX’s Starlink satellite constellation, new report finds
SpaceX's Starlink satellite constellation is facing threats from Russia...
China and Pakistan agree to fly 1st foreign astronaut to Chinese space station
For the first time, the Chinese space program will train...
ISRO’s “Space on Wheels” offers a peek into Indian Space Programme to students in Karimnagar
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)’s “Space on Wheels”...
Geospatial led solutions build the foundations for better decision-making
Geo Connect Asia 2025 paves the way for turning...
GEOSA, Singapore Land Authority Launch Achievements of Joint Geospatial System Project
Riyadh, SPA -- The General Authority for Survey and...
Building in Bangkok collapses as powerful earthquake hits southeast Asia
One person has died and 50 were injured in...
Bellatrix Aerospace Partners with Astroscale Japan for Space Debris Removal
Bellatrix Aerospace, a Bengaluru-based space mobility company, has joined...
NSTC announces Pingtung site as Taiwan’s space mission launch center
Taipei, March 26 (CNA) Taiwan's National Science and Technology...

Japan launched a new spy satellite into orbit on March 17, 2017, to help keep an eye on its nuclear-armed neighbor, North Korea. The Information Gathering Satellite (IGS) Radar 5 lifted off atop a Japanese H-IIA rocket from Tanegashima Space Center in southern Japan.

Japan started the IGS program in 1998, presumably in response to North Korean missile tests that sent missiles close to, or flying over, Japan.

In the years since, North Korea has repeatedly threatened to annihilate Japan (and South Korea and the United States), and continued to develop its nuclear-weapon and missile programs. The IGS satellites keep tabs on such efforts, help the Japanese government respond to natural disasters and perform several other functions, experts believe.

The first IGS craft lifted off in 2003. IGS Radar 5 is the 15th in the program to take flight, though not all have made it to orbit. Two were lost to a launch failure in November 2003.

Some of the IGS spacecraft use optical sensors to study the ground below, whereas others depend on radar instruments. As its name suggests, IGS Radar 5 falls into the latter category.

An H-IIA rocket launched Japan’s Information Gathering Satellite Radar 5 mission on March 17, 2017. (Credit: JAXA)