Google-backed Indian Space-tech Startup 'Pixxel' wins contract from US-based NASA


Google-backed Indian Space-tech Startup 'Pixxel' wins contract from US-based NASA
Google-supported Indian spacetech startup Pixxel has gotten an agreement from US space organization NASA as a feature of a $476 million business small satellite data obtaining program. Under this agreement, Pixxel will give NASA, and its administration and scholarly accomplices, with hyperspectral earth observation data for geology exploration and application exercises. 
The agreement — set to run until November 2028 — stamps one more critical step in the right direction as far as commercialisation for India's early spacetech industry, which tracked down its break speed after the opening up of the area for privately owned businesses in 2020 followed by the leeway of a devoted strategy in 2023. 
Established by Ahmed and Kshitij Khandelwal in 2019, Pixxel is a space information organization, constructing a group of stars of hyperspectral earth imaging satellites and the logical devices to mine experiences on environmental change, horticulture, biodiversity, asset the executives and that's just the beginning. 
Expressing to this, Pixxel's co-founder and CEO Awais Ahmed named the contract as a "monumental achievement" for the startup and will make access as a  "truly build a health monitor for the planet".
Pixxel is getting ready for the upcoming launch of Fireflies, the highest-resolution hyperspectral satellites in the world, with the opening of its first spacecraft manufacturing facility in Bengaluru in January. 
These satellites will catch information across 250+ ghastly groups, offering more inclusion with a 40-km area width and a 24-hour return to recurrence anyplace in the world. To make hyperspectral data "commercially even more broadly available and accessible to stakeholders across industries and governments," Pixxel plans to increase its constellation to 24 satellites in addition to the six that will launch soon.