The other significant item left to complete this launch is the re-test of a Range Safety antenna on the booster. This re-test is scheduled for completion on August 16. GeoEye-1 remains at the Payload Processing Facility at VAFB ready to be lifted and placed on top of the booster. The launch vehicle is stacked on the pad at Space Launch Complex 2 West. Booster processing continues. The launch time remains at 11:50:57 a.m. (PDT). Boeing Launch Services is supporting the commercial launch of GeoEye-1 and procured the launch vehicle and associated support services from ULA.
GeoEye-1 will have the highest resolution of any commercial imaging system -- 0.41-meters or 16 inches for panchromatic (black and white) imagery and multispectral (color) imagery at 1.65-meter resolution. The satellite is designed to offer three-meter accuracy, which means that end users can map natural and man-made features to within three meters of their actual locations on the surface of the Earth without ground control points. GeoEye-1 was financed in part by GeoEye's approximate $500-million contract with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA).

