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IMINT



 
 
IMINT, short for IMagery INTelligence, is an intelligence gathering discipline
List of intelligence gathering disciplines

Intelligence Gathering Disciplines...
 which collects information via satellite and aerial photography
Aerial photography

Aerial photography is the taking of photographs of the ground from an elevated position. The term usually refers to images in which the camera is not supported by a ground-based structure....
. As a means of collecting intelligence, IMINT is a subset of intelligence collection management
Intelligence collection management

Intelligence Collection Management is the process of managing and organizing the collection of intelligence information from various sources. The collection department of an intelligence organization may attempt basic validation of that which it collects, but is not intended to analyze its significance....
, which, in turn, is a subset of intelligence cycle management
Intelligence cycle management

Within the context of government, military and business affairs, Intelligence is intended to help decision-makers at every level to make informed decisions....
. IMINT is especially complemented by non-imaging MASINT electro-optical and radar sensors.

al intelligence goes back hundreds of years. Long in the past (the American Civil War
American Civil War

The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
 for example) hot air balloon
Hot air balloon

The hot air balloon is the oldest successful human-carrying flight technology. On November 21, 1783, in Paris, France, the first manned flight was made by Jean-Fran?ois Pil?tre de Rozier and Fran?ois Laurent d'Arlandes in a hot air balloon created by the Montgolfier brothers....
s were used to observe enemy formations long in the distance.






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IMINT, short for IMagery INTelligence, is an intelligence gathering discipline
List of intelligence gathering disciplines

Intelligence Gathering Disciplines...
 which collects information via satellite and aerial photography
Aerial photography

Aerial photography is the taking of photographs of the ground from an elevated position. The term usually refers to images in which the camera is not supported by a ground-based structure....
. As a means of collecting intelligence, IMINT is a subset of intelligence collection management
Intelligence collection management

Intelligence Collection Management is the process of managing and organizing the collection of intelligence information from various sources. The collection department of an intelligence organization may attempt basic validation of that which it collects, but is not intended to analyze its significance....
, which, in turn, is a subset of intelligence cycle management
Intelligence cycle management

Within the context of government, military and business affairs, Intelligence is intended to help decision-makers at every level to make informed decisions....
. IMINT is especially complemented by non-imaging MASINT electro-optical and radar sensors.

Aerial

Aerial intelligence goes back hundreds of years. Long in the past (the American Civil War
American Civil War

The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
 for example) hot air balloon
Hot air balloon

The hot air balloon is the oldest successful human-carrying flight technology. On November 21, 1783, in Paris, France, the first manned flight was made by Jean-Fran?ois Pil?tre de Rozier and Fran?ois Laurent d'Arlandes in a hot air balloon created by the Montgolfier brothers....
s were used to observe enemy formations long in the distance. In 1888 Amedee Denisse (France
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
) studied the possibility of cameras attached to rockets to obtain photographic evidence over great distances; unfortunately this vision was likely never achieved in full. Shortly after the turn of the century, the introduction of pigeons with small cameras attached to their chests became a short-lived long-distance reconnaissance option, but with obvious flaws and difficulties. On the other hand, the 19th century use of fixed balloons survived into World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
, when it was accompanied by observation from airship
Airship

An airship or dirigible is a aerostat that can be steered and propelled through the air using rudders and propellers or other thrust. Unlike other aerodynamics aircraft such as fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, which produce lift by moving a wing, or airfoil, through the air, aerostatic aircraft, such as airships and Balloon , stay...
s (zeppelin
Zeppelin

For the English rock group, please see Led Zeppelin. For other meanings please see Zeppelin .A Zeppelin is a type of rigid airship pioneered by the German Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin in the early 20th century, based on designs he had outlined in 1874, designs he had detailed in 1893, and that were reviewed by committee in 1894, which h...
s) and the newly invented airplane
Fixed-wing aircraft

A fixed-wing aircraft is an aircraft capable of heavier-than-air flight whose Lift is generated not by wing motion relative to the aircraft, but by forward motion through the air....
. In WW2 a Joint Imagery Intelligence unit was set up in Danesfield House
Danesfield House

Danesfield House in Medmenham, near Marlow, Buckinghamshire, Buckinghamshire, England, in the Chiltern Hills is a former country house now used as a hotel and spa....
, Medmenham
Medmenham

Medmenham is a village and civil parish within Wycombe district in Buckinghamshire, England. It is located on the River Thames, about three and a half miles southwest of Marlow, Buckinghamshire, three miles east of Henley-on-Thames....
 in Buckinghamshire
Buckinghamshire

Buckinghamshire is a Ceremonial counties of England and Metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties of England home counties Counties of England in South East England England....
, UK for British and US Intelligence Officers to exploit imagery gathered on the Germans.

Low- and high-flying planes have been used all through the last century to gather intelligence about the enemy. At the start of the Cold War, foreseeing the need to observe the enemy in peacetime as well as war, the U.S. developed high-flying reconnaissance planes. The first, the Lockheed U-2
Lockheed U-2

The Lockheed Corporation U-2, nicknamed "Dragon Lady", is a single-engine, high-altitude aircraft flown by the United States Air Force and previously flown by the Central Intelligence Agency....
, is still in service; its successor, the newer, much faster SR-71 Blackbird
SR-71 Blackbird

The Lockheed SR-71 was an advanced, long-range, Mach number 3 strategic reconnaissance aircraft developed from the Lockheed Lockheed A-12 and Lockheed YF-12 aircraft by the Lockheed Skunk Works....
, was retired in 1998. These planes have the advantage over satellites that they can usually produce more detailed photographs and can be placed over the target more quickly, more often, and more cheaply, but have the obvious disadvantage that they can be shot down. (However, there is no evidence an SR-71 was ever shot down.)

A new generation of unmanned reconnaissance planes has been developed for imagery and signals intelligence. Known as Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
Unmanned aerial vehicle

File:MQ-9 Reaper in flight .jpgAn unmanned aerial vehicle is an unpiloted aircraft. UAVs come in two varieties: some are controlled from a remote location, and others fly autonomously based on pre-programmed flight plans using more complex dynamic automation systems....
s, these drones are a force multiplier by giving the battlefield commander an "eye in the sky" without risking a pilot
Aviator

An aviator is a person who flies aircraft for pleasure or as a profession.The feminine word aviatrix is sometimes used and is the correct term to refer to all women pilots....
. The US Army
United States Army

The United States Army is the branch of the United States Armed Forces responsible for Army operations. It is the largest and oldest established branch of the U.S....
 is significantly increasing the size of its current UAV force as part of the Future Combat System initiative.

Satellites

Though the resolution of satellite photographs, which must be taken from distances of hundreds of kilometers, is usually poorer than photographs taken by air
Aerial photography

Aerial photography is the taking of photographs of the ground from an elevated position. The term usually refers to images in which the camera is not supported by a ground-based structure....
, satellites offer the possibility of coverage for much of the earth, including hostile territory, without exposing human pilots to the risk of being shot down.

There have been hundreds of reconnaissance satellites launched by dozens of nations since the first years of space exploration. While the information about the vast majority of such satellites are strictly classified
Classified information

Classified information is sensitive information to which access is restricted by law or regulation to particular classes of persons. A formal security clearance is required to handle classified documents or access classified data....
, some information (such as that concerning the US Corona program) has been declassified with the end of the Cold War
Cold War

The Cold War was the continuing state of conflict, tension and competition that existed between a number of world powers, including the United States, the Soviet Union, People's Republic of China, France, United Kingdom and those countries' respective allies from the mid-1940s to the early 1990s....
.

Early photographic reconnaissance satellites used photographic film, which was exposed on-orbit and returned to earth for developing. These satellites remained in orbit for days, weeks, or months before ejecting their film-return vehicles, called "buckets." Between 1959 and 1984 the U.S. launched around 200 such satellites under the codenames CORONA
Corona

A corona is a type of Plasma "celestial body's atmosphere" of the Sun or other celestial body, extending millions of kilometres into space, most easily seen during a total solar eclipse, but also observable in a coronagraph....
 and GAMBIT
Gambit

A gambit is a chess opening in which the first player risks or sacrifice material, usually a pawn , with the hope of achieving a resulting advantageous position....
, with photographic resolutions as high as 0.6- 1.2 meters (2-4 feet). The first successful mission concluded on 1960-08-19 with the mid-air recovery by a C-119 of film from the Corona mission code-named Discoverer 14
Discoverer 14

Discoverer 14 was a spy satellite used in the Corona program managed by DARPA and the United States Air Force. On 1960-08-19 usable photographic film images taken by the satellite were recovered by a C-119 recovery aircraft....
. This was the first successful recovery of film from an orbiting satellite and the first aerial recovery of an object returning from Earth orbit. Because of a tradeoff between area covered and ground resolution, not all reconnaissance satellites have been designed for high resolution; the KH-5
KH-5

Codenamed Argon, the KH-5 was a series of reconnaissance satellites produced by the United States from February 1961 to August 1964. The KH-5 operated similarly to the Corona series of satellites, as it ejected a canister of photographic film....
-ARGON program had a ground resolution of 140 meters and was intended for mapmaking
Cartography

File:Mediterranean chart fourteenth century2.jpgCartography is the study and practice of making Geography Map. Combining science, aesthetics, and technique, cartography builds on the premise that we can model reality in ways that communicate spatial information effectively....
.

Between 1961 and 1994 the USSR launched perhaps 500 Zenit
Zenit spy satellite

Zenit is the name of a series of military spy satellites launched by the Soviet Union between 1961 and 1994. To conceal their nature, all flights were given the public Cosmos designation....
 film-return satellites, which returned both the film and the camera to earth in a pressurized capsule.

Satellites for imaging intelligence were usually placed in low-earth, high-inclination orbits, sometimes in sun-synchronous orbit
Sun-synchronous orbit

A sun-synchronous orbit is a geocentric orbit which combines altitude and inclination in such a way that an object on that orbit passes over any given point of the Earth's surface at the same local solar time....
s. Since the film-return missions were usually short, they could indluge in orbits with low perigees, in the range of 100-200 km, but the more recent CCD-based satellites have been launched into higher orbits, 250-300 km perigee, allowing each to remain in orbit for several years .

While the exact resolution
Optical resolution

Optical resolution describes the ability of an imaging system to resolve detail in the object that is being imaged.An imaging system may have many individual components including a lens and recording and display components....
 and other details of modern spy satellite
Spy satellite

A spy satellite is an Earth observation satellite or communications satellite deployed for military or espionage applications. These are essentially Space observatory that are pointed toward the Earth instead of toward the stars....
s are classified, some idea of the trade-offs available can be made using simple physics. The formula for the highest possible resolution of an optical system with a circular aperture is given by the Rayleigh criterion:

where ? is the angular resolution, ? is the wavelength
Wavelength

In physics, wavelength is the distance between repeating units of a propagating wave of a given frequency. It is commonly designated by the Greek language letter lambda ....
 of light, and D is the diameter of the lens or mirror. Were the Hubble Space Telescope, with a 2.5 m telescope, designed for photographing Earth, it would be diffraction-limited to resolutions greater than 16cm (6 inches) for green light ( nm) at its orbital altitude of 590 km. This means that it would be impossible to take photographs showing objects smaller than 16cm with such a telescope at such an altitude. Modern U.S. IMINT satellites are believed to have around 10cm resolution; contrary to references in popular culture, this is sufficient to detect any type of vehicle, but not to read the headlines of a newspaper.

The U.S. KH-11
KH-11

The KH-11, also referenced by the codenames 1010, Crystal and Kennan, also commonly known as "Key Hole", was a type of reconnaissance satellite launched by the United States National Reconnaissance Office between December 1976 and 1990 and used until present....
 series of satellites, first launched in 1976, was made by Lockheed
Lockheed Corporation

The Lockheed Corporation was an United States aerospace company founded in 1912 which merged with Martin Marietta in 1995 in aviation to form Lockheed Martin....
, the same contractor who built the Hubble Space Telescope
Hubble Space Telescope

The Hubble Space Telescope is a Space observatory that was carried into Low Earth orbit STS-31 in April 1990. It is named after the American astronomer Edwin Hubble....
. HST has a 2.4 metre telescope mirror and is believed to have had a similar appearance to the KH-11 satellites. These satellites used charge-coupled devices, predecessors to modern digital cameras, rather than film.

The primary purpose of most spy satellites is to monitor visible ground activity. While resolution
Image resolution

Image resolution describes the detail an holds. The term applies equally to digital images, film images, and other types of images. Higher resolution means more image detail....
 and clarity of images has improved greatly over the years, this role has remained essentially the same. Some other uses of satellite imaging have been to produce detailed 3D maps for use in operations and missile guidance systems, and to monitor normally invisible information such as the growth levels of a country's crops or the heat given off by certain facilities. Some of the multi-spectral sensors, such as thermal measurement, are more electro-optical MASINT
Electro-optical MASINT

Electro-optical MASINT is a subdiscipline of Measurement and Signature Intelligence, and refers to list of intelligence gathering disciplines activities which bring together disparate elements that do not fit within the definitions of Signals Intelligence , , or HUMINT ....
 than true IMINT platforms.

To counter the threat posed by these 'eyes in the sky', the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
, USSR
Soviet Union

The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was a Constitution of the Soviet Union socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922 to 1991.The name is a translation of the , romanization of Russian Soyuz Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Respublik, abbreviated ????, SSSR....
/Russia
Russia

Russia , or the Russian Federation , is a list of countries spanning more than one continent country extending over much of northern Eurasia....
, China
China

China is a Culture of China, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or multinational entity extending over a large area in East Asia....
 and possibly others, have developed systems for destroying enemy spy satellites
Anti-satellite weapon

Anti-satellite weapons are space weapons designed to incapacitate or destroy satellites for strategic military purposes. Currently, only the USA, the former USSR and the People's Republic of China are known to have developed these weapons....
 (either with the use of another 'killer satellite', or with some sort of Earth- or air-launched missile).

Since 1985, commercial vendors of satellite imagery have entered the market, beginning with the French SPOT
SPOT (satellites)

SPOT is a high-resolution, optical imaging Earth observation satellite system operating from space. It is run by Spot Image based in Toulouse, France....
 satellites, which had resolutions between 5 and 20 metres. Recent high-resolution ( 4 - 0.5 metre) private imaging satellites include IKONOS
IKONOS

IKONOS is a commercial earth observation satellite, and was the first to collect publicly available high-resolution imagery at 1- and 4-meter resolution....
, Orbview, QuickBird
QuickBird

QuickBird is a high-resolution commercial earth observation satellite, owned by DigitalGlobe and launched in 2001 as the first satellite in a constellation of three scheduled to be in orbit by 2008....
 and Worldview-1
WorldView-1

WorldView-1 is a commercial earth observation satellite owned by DigitalGlobe. It was launched September 18, 2007, and DigitalGlobe plans to launch another, similar satellite after its construction is finished in late 2008....
, allowing any country (or any business for that matter) to buy access to satellite images.

Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

UAVs
Unmanned aerial vehicle

File:MQ-9 Reaper in flight .jpgAn unmanned aerial vehicle is an unpiloted aircraft. UAVs come in two varieties: some are controlled from a remote location, and others fly autonomously based on pre-programmed flight plans using more complex dynamic automation systems....
 have developed until they span a spectrum of literally handheld imaging platforms for infantry tactical use, up to large multisensor platforms such as Global Hawk. Global Hawk, with its long loiter time and global reach, has some of the attributes of a satellite
Satellite

In the context of spaceflight, a satellite is an Physical body which has been placed into orbit by human endeavor. Such objects are sometimes called artificial satellites to distinguish them from natural satellites such as the Moon....
 in a lower earth orbit than would be feasible for a true orbiter
Orbiter

An orbiter is a space probe that orbits a planet or natural satellite without landing on it in order to study its surface from a distance....
.

See also

  • JARIC
    JARIC

    JARIC - The National Imagery Exploitation Centre, part of the Intelligence Collection Group within United Kingdom Defence Intelligence Staff, is a photographic interpretation and intelligence centre based at RAF Brampton near Huntingdon in Cambridgeshire....
     at RAF Brampton
    RAF Brampton

    RAF Brampton is a Royal Air Force station near Huntingdon in Cambridgeshire. Formerly the home of RAF Support Command, it now houses several elements of Defence Equipment & Support , which itself was a result of a merger between the Defence Logistics Organisation and the Defence Procurement Agency , and provides a base for the Defence Securi...
     (UK interpretation center)
  • MASINT: Measurement and Signature Intelligence
  • National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency
    National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency

    The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency is an List of United States federal agencies of the United States Government with the primary mission of collection, analysis, and distribution of geospatial intelligence in support of national security....
     (U.S. interpretation center)
  • RAF Intelligence
    RAF Intelligence

    Royal Air Force Intelligence is formed by Officers of the Royal Air Force Operations Support Branch and Airmen from the Intelligence Analyst Trade and Intelligence Analyst Trade....
    : Royal Air Force
    Royal Air Force

    The Royal Air Force is the United Kingdom's air force, the oldest independent air force in the world. Formed on 1 April 1918, the RAF has taken a significant role in British military history ever since, playing a large part in World War II and in more recent conflicts....
     Intelligence Branch
  • GEOINT
    GEOINT

    GEOINT stands for GEOspatial INTelligence, which is an list of intelligence gathering disciplines comprising the exploitation and analysis of geospatial information to describe, assess, and visually depict physical features and geographically referenced activities on the Earth....
    : Geospatial Intelligence
  • Dino A. Brugioni
    Dino Brugioni

    Dino A. Brugioni is a former senior official at the CIA's National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency#NPIC . He was an and also served as NPIC's Chief of Information....
  • Arthur C. Lundahl
    Arthur C. Lundahl

    Arthur Charles Lundahl was the key organizer of the US post-WWII imagery intelligence an aerial-photography expert whose detection of missile installations in Cuba in 1962 led to the Cuban missile crisis....
  • Maya Quiñones, William Gould, and Carlos D. Rodríguez-Pedraza. United States Department of Agriculture
    United States Department of Agriculture

    The United States Department of Agriculture is the United States federal executive departments responsible for developing and executing Federal government of the United States policy on farming, agriculture, and food....
      (February 2007) (Study on availability of commercial imagery in 2007 which summarizes collection systems and data products.)