Pixxel, a five-year-old startup, launched the first three commercial satellites of its Firefly constellation on Tuesday night. The Bengaluru-based hyperspectral imaging and Earth Observation (EO) startup plans to launch a total of 18 satellites in its constellation, providing critical climate and Earth insights to industries globally.
Budget with ET
Sitharaman likely to give India’s ‘Aam Aadmi’ what they want in Budget?
Can Budget 2025 address India's unemployment woes?
Can the Budget provide a delta to the China plus one effort?
“With a 5-meter resolution attained for the first time in a hyperspectral spacecraft, Fireflies are six times sharper than the 30-meter standard of most existing hyperspectral satellites, capturing fine details previously invisible to conventional systems,” Pixxel stated, adding that this achievement makes Fireflies India’s first private satellite constellation.
The indigenously built satellites were integrated via SpaceX’s Exolaunch aboard the Transporter-12 rideshare mission from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.
Pixxel explained that Fireflies will capture data across 150 spectral bands, enabling the detection of subtle changes in chemical compositions, vegetation health, water quality, and even atmospheric conditions with unmatched accuracy. “Unlike traditional EO satellites that rely on broader spectral bands, Fireflies’ narrowband sensors uncover hidden patterns and anomalies critical for applications ranging from agriculture to climate action,” the startup said.
The