It was called "people's" because it was purchased entirely with money donated by Ukrainians and people from various sovereign countries.[1][2]
Fundraising campaign
The deal was implemented after a series of fundraising projects to purchase “People’s Bayraktar” in June 2022.[3][4]
The Serhiy Prytula Foundation and blogger Ihor Lachenkov launched the initiative to raise funds and buy three Bayraktar TB2 drones.[5][6]
Ukrainians collected ₴600 million in a matter of days.[7][8] The Turkish company Baykar provided three Bayraktar TB2 drones free of charge.[9] The Foundation started to look for ways to spend the collected money in the most efficient way for the needs of the Ukrainian army.[10]
Ukrainian space entrepreneur Max Polyakov, founder of EOS Data Analytics, was involved in negotiations due to his expertise in the satellite market.[12][13]
In March 2022, at the beginning of the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, Max Polyakov asked Earth Observation firms and space agencies that collect satellite imagery to share recent and real-time high-to-medium resolution optical and radar satellite imagery with Ukraine.[14] EOS DA offered its capabilities to process that data.[15]
Agreement details
On August 18, 2022, ICEYE announced an agreement with the Serhiy Prytula Charity Foundation. As a result of the agreement, ICEYE provided the Ministry of Defence of Ukraine full access to one of its satellites, which is undisclosed due to security reasons. Also, ICEYE provided access to its constellation for tasking over Ukraine and neighboring territories.[16][17]
Additionally, ICEYE provided access to its constellation of SAR satellites, allowing the Ukrainian Armed Forces to receive radar satellite imagery on critical locations with a high revisit frequency.[18]
Characteristics
The resolution of satellite devices starts from 0.25 meters per pixel, depending on the area covered by the image. One picture can cover an area of up to 225 km2 (87 sq mi). The satellite is located at an altitude of 500–600 km (310–370 mi) above the Earth's surface.[19]
The satellite operates in a Sun-synchronous orbit. It makes 15 orbits around the Earth in a day and moves at a speed of approximately 7.5 km/s (17,000 mph).[20]
With the help of the ICEYE satellite, Ukraine can receive images in a few hours from the moment of image acquisition in space.[21]