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@ 作为一个知识播客的主持人,我了解到间谍卫星,也称为侦察卫星,正在地球上空收集图像和情报。目前有十个国家拥有间谍卫星。虽然这些卫星可以收集大量数据,但它们并不像电影和电视中描述的那样拥有超能力。间谍卫星的想法实际上早于卫星时代,最初的想法就是用它来监视其他国家。虽然我们对间谍卫星有很多不了解的地方,但随着信息解密,专家们可以对当前的技术状态做出有根据的猜测。间谍卫星的起源可以追溯到 19 世纪,最初使用热气球和飞机进行侦察。美国在 1955 年开始研发间谍卫星,而苏联在 1957 年发射了第一颗人造卫星,这改变了一切。Corona 计划是美国第一个成功的侦察卫星项目,旨在收集关于苏联和其他敌人的情报。每个 Corona 卫星携带高分辨率胶片,寿命很短。Keyhole 11 卫星使用电子光学成像系统,将实时图像以数字方式安全地传回地球。苏联也有自己的间谍卫星计划,Zenit 卫星是 Corona 卫星的苏联版本。光学间谍卫星的分辨率是指图像中可以清晰区分的最小物体或细节。现代美国 Keyhole 11 系列或更好的间谍卫星可以达到大约 10 厘米/像素的分辨率。间谍卫星无法读取报纸,Keyhole 12 甚至 Keyhole 13 代卫星的传闻未经证实。政府不能随时随地放大并查看地球上的任何一点,光学卫星就像指向地球的哈勃太空望远镜。光学卫星以极快的速度在低地球轨道上运行,无法提供实时视频,图像会受到云层、光照等因素的影响。除了光学卫星,还有窃听无线电信号的卫星,例如 NRL-44。信号情报卫星通常位于地球同步轨道,用于监视地球的大部分区域,并配备大型天线。这些卫星旨在接收军事通信、海军传输、政府和外交通信,甚至可能包括导弹发射。可以通过将卫星天线指向地平线来拦截微波信号。由于间谍卫星数据量巨大,人工分析已无法满足需求,因此侦察机构已转向人工智能,例如国家侦察局使用的 Sentient 系统。人工智能可以快速识别卫星图像中的物体,检测变化,并识别潜在威胁。目前有 10 个国家拥有间谍卫星能力,间谍卫星是当今世界情报收集的重要组成部分。间谍卫星数据由成千上万的人和世界上最强大的计算机系统处理。

Deep Dive

Chapters
This chapter explores the history and evolution of spy satellites, from their conceptualization in the 19th century to the Corona program and the transition from film-based to digital technologies. It details the challenges of retrieving film canisters from orbit and the increasing reliance on digital data transmission.
  • Spy satellites have a long history, predating the satellite age.
  • The Corona program was a pivotal moment in spy satellite technology.
  • The transition from film-based to digital technology significantly impacted the capabilities and lifespans of spy satellites.

Shownotes Transcript

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A reconnaissance satellite, otherwise known as a spy satellite, is somewhere above your head right now collecting images and gathering intelligence on whatever it sees below. Ten countries are currently believed to have at least one spy satellite. And while these satellites can gather an enormous amount of data, they do not have the superpowers that they're often depicted as having in films and television. Learn more about spy satellites, how they work, and how they've evolved over time on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.

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The idea of a reconnaissance satellite, aka a spy satellite, is one that actually predates the satellite age. In fact, when the idea of an artificial satellite that could orbit the Earth was first proposed, the use case of spying on other countries was one of the very first things that was thought of.

Before I go any further, let me say that there is much that we do not know about spy satellites because much of the information is classified. However, over time, information has been declassified and experts have been able to make educated guesses as to the current state of the technology. The origin of spy satellites actually could be considered to go back to the 19th century. The desire to get reconnaissance on an enemy goes all the way back to antiquity. This usually had to be done via spies or traitors.

However, with the development of the hot air balloon, you could send someone up above a battlefield in a balloon attached to a rope to see what the enemy was up to. Battlefields in the 19th century were still like ancient battlefields insofar as they were rather dense. Men were packed together almost shoulder to shoulder. During the First World War, things became much more spread out, with front lines stretching out for miles.

Moreover, artillery positions might be miles to the rear where artillery rounds could still reach trenches but couldn't be seen. This problem was solved by the airplane. The first aircraft in the war were actually reconnaissance aircraft. They would fly over enemy lines and eventually those reconnaissance pilots started shooting at each other. Planes like the SR-71 Blackbird and the U-2 spy plane were designed to avoid enemy surface-to-air missiles by flying faster and higher than the enemy could reach.

The problem was, of course, is that this didn't always work. The whole Francis Gary Powers and the U-2 incident proved that. The idea of using satellites for reconnaissance was first considered in the late 1940s. In a 1946 study, the RAND Corporation proposed the concept of an orbital bombardment system, but the focus soon shifted to photographic reconnaissance.

History would prove the idea to be sound, but the RAND proposal was more than a decade away from the launch of the first artificial satellite. In 1955, the United States Air Force began researching to the development of a satellite that could view predetermined parts of the Earth, quote, "...to determine the status of a potential enemy's war-making capability."

The launch of Sputnik 1 in 1957 changed everything. The Soviet Union launched the first artificial satellite, demonstrating that satellites could reach orbit, and now the theory had become a reality. The Corona program was the United States' first successful reconnaissance satellite project, developed jointly by the CIA, the U.S. Air Force, and private aerospace contractors.

It operated from 1959 to 1972 and was designed to gather intelligence on the Soviet Union and other adversaries during the Cold War. The Corona satellites, also known under the codename Discoverer, were equipped with film-based cameras that captured high-resolution images of strategic locations such as Soviet military bases, missile sites, and other installations. The first successful mission that returned usable images occurred in August of 1960 with Discoverer 14.

Each Corona satellite carried between 3,000 to 16,000 feet, or 900 to 4,800 meters, of high-resolution, specially designed, lightweight film. Corona satellites had very short operational lifespans, typically ranging from a few days to a few weeks, with most missions lasting between 10 to 20 days. The lifespan was dictated by the amount of film available and the need to return it to Earth before the satellite's orbit decayed.

Once all the film was used, the mission was effectively over and the satellite would either deorbit and burn up in the atmosphere or remain as space debris. The film was returned to Earth through the use of film return capsules, also called buckets, which were ejected from the satellite at the end of the mission. Each capsule was designed to survive re-entry through the Earth's atmosphere using a heat shield. As it descended, a parachute would deploy, slowing its fall to ensure a safe recovery.

Special aircraft such as a C-119 flying boxcar and later a C-130 Hercules were stationed in pre-designated areas to catch the descending capsules mid-air using a special hook system. Starting with the Corona program, each series of satellites were given a designation with the term keyhole. The Corona program consisted of keyholes 1 through 4.

Physical film worked, but for obvious reasons it was challenging to retrieve, and an enormous amount of money had to be put into building and launching a satellite for something that would only last a few weeks. The first step towards resolving this problem was in 1976 with the launch of Keyhole 11. This satellite had an electro-optical imaging system. Real-time image transmission was electrically sent back to Earth using secure digital downlinks.

The satellite used an early version of a charged coupled device, which is not too dissimilar from what can be found in modern digital cameras today. The Americans weren't the only ones with a spy satellite program. The Soviets had a program of their own. Zenit satellites were the Soviet equivalent of the Corona satellites. Zenit satellites were based on the Vostok human spacecraft and were film-based. Yantar series satellites, which began in 1974 and has continued to the present, were the successor to Zenit.

It had improved imaging and electronic intelligence capabilities. While there's much we've learned about the Soviet Union after it fell, one thing that wasn't declassified were the spy satellites because the Russian Federation simply picked up the program. One important thing to understand about optical reconnaissance satellites is the concept of resolution.

Resolution in optical spy satellites refers to the smallest object or detail that can be clearly distinguished in an image, typically measured in centimeters per pixel, with higher resolution allowing for finer details to be observed from space. The exact resolution capabilities of current military spy satellites are classified and not disclosed to the public.

However, based on available information and expert analysis, it's determined that modern US spy satellites of the Keyhole 11 series or better can achieve resolutions of approximately 10 centimeters per pixel. This level of detail would allow for the identification of objects such as vehicles and equipment, but not necessarily smaller items or fine details like reading text.

So, if someone's reading a newspaper on a bench, a spy satellite could not read the newspaper. And for all I know, there's someone working at the National Reconnaissance Office listening to this episode right now who is laughing at me because I don't have a clue of just how powerful current satellites are. There are unconfirmed rumors of a Keyhole 12 generation of satellites and even possibly a Keyhole 13 generation, but if they exist, they are still classified.

In contrast, commercial Earth observation satellites, which provide imagery for platforms like Google Maps, offer lower resolutions due to regulatory restrictions. For instance, satellite operators and companies such as Maxar and Airbus provide imagery with resolutions of around 30 centimeters per pixel. This allows for the identification of larger objects such as vehicles and buildings, but lacks the finer detail potentially available to military-grade satellites.

If you have used Google Maps and have seen images that seem to have far better resolution, you are correct. Many major cities and urban areas have images that are augmented with aerial photography. A misconception that people often have about spy satellites is that the government could just zoom in and look at any point on Earth at any given time. It doesn't quite work that way. Optical satellites are basically like the Hubble Space Telescope except pointed at the Earth.

It's in low Earth orbit and is whizzing by at about 17,000 miles per hour. In a polar orbit, you could schedule a time to look at a given point on Earth, but you may have to schedule it for probably at least a few hours in advance. And even then, the image would still be subject to cloud cover, daylight, and other factors. Unlike the film The Enemy of the State, satellites cannot provide live video with a bird's eye view because they can't hover in one spot.

Optical satellites are not the only type of spy satellite. There are also satellites that eavesdrop on radio signals. One of the most recent launches was that of the NRL-44, which stands for National Reconnaissance Organization Launch. It's one of the largest and most powerful intelligence-gathering satellites ever built, designed for intercepting communications and electronic signals from adversaries. NRL-44 is believed to be part of the Orion series of signal intelligence satellites.

Signal intelligence satellites are different from optical satellites in that they are usually parked in geosynchronous orbit and are designed to sit and monitor a large part of the Earth. These satellites are believed to have massive antennas. Estimates suggest that Orion-class satellites have a 100-meter-wide mesh antenna, making them some of the largest satellites ever deployed.

These satellites are designed to pick up military communications, naval transmissions including ship and submarine movements, government and diplomatic communications, and possibly even missile launches. One of the most interesting types of signal intelligence satellites involves intercepting microwave signals. If you've ever seen a microwave transmitter on a radio tower, it looks like a big drum. Microwave transmissions are electromagnetic signals operating in the 1GHz to 300GHz frequency range.

they're usually used for direct point-to-point communications. So you can't just intercept a microwave signal from geosynchronous orbit by looking down at it. However, you can intercept the emissions that go past the receiver if you point a satellite dish at the horizon where the microwave signal would be coming from in a straight line from the microwave transmitter. We know that the Aquacade satellites in the 1970s did this and there are almost certainly satellites that can do this today.

In fact, some satellites may be put into highly elliptical orbits over the poles just so they can intercept communications done by microwave in the far north. One of the biggest problems with spy satellite data today is that there's just so much of it. Back when spy satellites would drop film canisters from orbit, the amount of data that was retrieved was limited enough that humans could process it. Today, the amount of data that's gathered, both optical and signal intelligence, is so great that it's beyond the scope of human analysts to sift through all of it.

One of the tools that the reconnaissance community has turned to is artificial intelligence. Declassified documents have revealed the existence of an AI system used by the National Reconnaissance Office, known as Sentient, a name that is in no way scary for an artificial intelligence program. Sentient is believed to analyze spy satellite data by automating the processing of vast amounts of imagery, signals, and intelligence reports, allowing for faster and more accurate assessments.

AI-powered algorithms can quickly identify and classify objects in satellite images, detect changes over time, and recognize patterns that indicate military activity, hidden infrastructure, or potential threats. The National Reconnaissance Office, which I've mentioned several times already now, is one of the most important, yet least talked about, intelligence agencies in the world. Currently, it's believed that there are 10 countries with some manner of spy satellite capabilities.

the United States, China, Russia, France, Israel, Italy, India, Germany, the United Kingdom and Spain. Spy satellites are an extremely important part of intelligence gathering in the world today, and almost all of it is done outside of our view. But even though we can't see it, above our heads, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, hundreds of satellites are observing the surface of the planet and radio signals.

And that data is processed by thousands of people and some of the most powerful computer systems in the entire world. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Austin Okun and Cameron Kiefer.

I have two short reviews today, both of which come from Apple Podcasts in the United States. The first is from listener Mrs. Ben Solo, who writes, Completionist Club. At last, Gary is a fantastic podcaster and there's always something new and interesting to learn. Checking in from the Kentucky Completionist Club as of today. Well, thank you, Mrs. Solo. I hope you enjoy the signature mint juleps that are available at the Kentucky chapter of the Completionist Club.

The next review comes from Lala Fan, who writes, One of the best informational podcasts. Short, concise, and well-researched. With this podcast, there's no reason you can't learn something new every day. Well, thanks, Lala. Learning something new every day is indeed the show's motto, and for a very good reason. Remember, if you leave a review or send me a boostagram, you too can have it read on the show.