![SACHI program group photo at launch.](/sites/default/files/styles/news_3_up/public/news/image/2025-02/SACHI%20team%20at%20launch.png?itok=-XFVvYnV)
![This imagery of Hurricane Katrina as it heads toward New Orleans was captured by a system developed at Lincoln Laboratory.](/sites/default/files/styles/ifde_hero/public/rdgroup/image/2018-04/Ch11_Fig_01_Katrina_2009.jpg?h=3afe354d&itok=NB2sU6To)
Applied Space Systems
Monitoring of both extraterrestrial and terrestrial environments from space yields important information about the nature and movements of spacecraft and celestial bodies, the activity of weather systems, and the topography of Earth. Our group develops electro-optical, infrared and microwave sensor systems for detecting and tracking natural phenomena and human-made space objects. Our researchers analyze hyperspectral imagery generated by spaceborne and airborne sensors to determine the significant features of space objects and terrains of interest. Working with other Laboratory divisions and collaborators from government agencies and academia, we have designed and prototyped next-generation space-based sensor systems, ranging from a precision instrument to detect exoplanets to a constellation of advanced radiometric instruments to better understand storm structures.
Featured Projects
![a photo of a small satellite in a studio](/sites/default/files/styles/list/public/project/image/2023-08/TROPICS.png?h=5463d0de&itok=1Rk-6x3n)
TROPICS
![Imagery from the GOES-16 Advanced Baseline Imager](/sites/default/files/styles/list/public/project/image/2019-06/earth-2.jpg?h=6c8fd2c3&itok=xM8bx9T1)
Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite Series
![TESS's cameras, which will monitor planets passing in front of stars, were designed and built by Lincoln Laboratory engineers. Illustration: Chester Beals](/sites/default/files/styles/list/public/project/image/2018-04/AR13_TESS_Earth2.png?h=e75ab034&itok=MzzwiO3a)
Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite
Latest News
![SACHI program group photo at launch.](/sites/default/files/styles/news_3_up/public/news/image/2025-02/SACHI%20team%20at%20launch.png?itok=-XFVvYnV)
![GOES-19, the last of four giants, rolls toward its launch pad at the Kennedy Space Center earlier this month.BEN SMEGELSKY/NASA](/sites/default/files/styles/news_3_up/public/news/image/2024-07/_20240625_on_weather_satellites_lede.jpg?itok=NUSuOLaa)