It will launch later this 13th of August aboard an Atlas rocket, and will operate from an expected altitude of 617km. This means the WorldView-3 will have an average revisit time of under a day, allowing it to capture up to 680,000 square kilometers of imagery each day. Such data-rich imagery will come in handy where the discovery of new sources of minerals and fuels, forest and farm management are concerned.
This would also mean that there is a very real possibility of seeing details such as manhole covers and mailboxes on Google Maps and Bing Maps down the road, since WorldView-3 is owned by DigitalGlobe, where Google and Bing happen to be the company’s customers as well.