"We successfully separated the satellite from the rocket and put it into orbit," said Toshimitsu Ozeki, an official of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, which built the rocket. The government-run satellite will replace the first model with an advanced optical device to distinguish objects on the ground with a resolution of some 60 centimetres (24 inches), the officials and local media said. The new satellite will undergo a performance trial for about three months before starting fully-fledged operations, Kyodo News reported.
The launch is the nation's latest effort to build an intelligence-gathering system following North Korea's missile launch in 1998 over the Japanese archipelago. In defiance of international pressure, North Korea launched again what was believed to be a three-stage Taepodong-2 missile in April, with an estimated range of 6,700 kilometers (4,100 miles). Japan currently operates two optical satellites and a radar satellite, while planning to add another radar satellite by March 2013 to complete the system so that it will be able to monitor designated places on the Earth once a day. The satellite launched Saturday cost about 48.7 billion yen (580 million dollars) for research and development and around 9.4 billion yen for manufacturing and the launch, Kyodo said.

