@prefix skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> .
@prefix ns0: <http://gcmd.gsfc.nasa.gov/kms#> .

<https://gcmd.earthdata.nasa.gov/kms/concept/3466eed1-2fbb-49bf-ab0b-dc08731d502b>
  skos:prefLabel "Earth Observation Satellites"@en ;
  a skos:Concept ;
  skos:narrower <https://gcmd.earthdata.nasa.gov/kms/concept/ec484699-009f-4f39-93aa-d11379b4288a> .

<https://gcmd.earthdata.nasa.gov/kms/concept/ec484699-009f-4f39-93aa-d11379b4288a>
  skos:prefLabel "COMS"@en ;
  skos:broader <https://gcmd.earthdata.nasa.gov/kms/concept/3466eed1-2fbb-49bf-ab0b-dc08731d502b> ;
  skos:changeNote """2018-02-26 15:53:48.0 [sritz]  
update AltLabel (null); 
""", """2018-02-26 15:57:08.0 [sritz]  
insert Definition (id: null
text: In 1996, Korea established its long-term plan of the National Space Program which was revised in 2000 to accommodate the public and civilian demand for satellite utilization and to maintain the continuity of satellite services. The plan prospects the details of the future space activities of Korea until 2015 and serves as a basis for space development in Korea. In response to this space plan, the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA) started to define and formulate the basic requirements for COMS, the first geostationary meteorological satellite mission of Korea. - Note: The nickname Cheollian means long distance view (literally "Thousand Li View") in Korean.

COMS is a geostationary meteorological satellite program of Korea with multifunctional applications in the fields of:

1) Experimental communications: a) in-orbit verification of developed communication technology, b) experiment of wide-band multimedia communication service

2) Ocean color monitoring: a) monitoring of marine environment and ecosystem, b) production of fishery information. The scope of the ocean color mission includes detecting, monitoring and predicting short-term biological phenomena such as HAB (Harmful Algal Bloom), studies on biogeochemical variables, monitoring health of the marine ecosystem, coastal zone and resource management and providing information for fishing communities.

3) Meteorological observations: a) continuous monitoring of the ground segment from GEO and extraction of meteorological products, b) early detection of severe weather phenomena, c) monitoring of long-term change of SST and clouds. The meteorological mission will complement the existing network of geostationary satellites, providing improved input data for numerical weather prediction models, and monitoring climate changes; the data, imagery and derived products will be freely available to both domestic and international community in real-time or near real-time basis through direct broadcasting or land lines.
language code: en); 
""", """2018-02-26 16:13:48.0 [sritz]  
update WeightedRelation (Platform-Instrument); 
update WeightedRelation (1.0); 
""", """2018-02-26 15:52:22.0 [sritz] Insert Concept 
add broader relation (COMS [ec484699-009f-4f39-93aa-d11379b4288a,310595] - Earth Observation Satellites [3466eed1-2fbb-49bf-ab0b-dc08731d502b,287601]); 
""", """2018-02-26 16:13:08.0 [sritz]  
insert WeightedRelation (id: null
related concept uuid: 7a5528bc-32da-43e1-9790-23c91b4484ed
relationship type: null
relationship value: null
generated by: null); 
""", """2018-02-26 15:53:28.0 [sritz]  
insert AltLabel (id: null
category: primary
text: Communication, Ocean and Meteorological Satellite
language code: en); 
insert AltLabel (id: null
category: null
text: GEO-KOMPSAT-1
language code: en); 
insert AltLabel (id: null
category: null
text: Cheollian-1
language code: en); 
""" ;
  ns0:altLabel [ ] ;
  skos:altLabel "Cheollian-1"@en, "GEO-KOMPSAT-1"@en ;
  skos:definition """In 1996, Korea established its long-term plan of the National Space Program which was revised in 2000 to accommodate the public and civilian demand for satellite utilization and to maintain the continuity of satellite services. The plan prospects the details of the future space activities of Korea until 2015 and serves as a basis for space development in Korea. In response to this space plan, the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA) started to define and formulate the basic requirements for COMS, the first geostationary meteorological satellite mission of Korea. - Note: The nickname Cheollian means long distance view (literally "Thousand Li View") in Korean.

COMS is a geostationary meteorological satellite program of Korea with multifunctional applications in the fields of:

1) Experimental communications: a) in-orbit verification of developed communication technology, b) experiment of wide-band multimedia communication service

2) Ocean color monitoring: a) monitoring of marine environment and ecosystem, b) production of fishery information. The scope of the ocean color mission includes detecting, monitoring and predicting short-term biological phenomena such as HAB (Harmful Algal Bloom), studies on biogeochemical variables, monitoring health of the marine ecosystem, coastal zone and resource management and providing information for fishing communities.

3) Meteorological observations: a) continuous monitoring of the ground segment from GEO and extraction of meteorological products, b) early detection of severe weather phenomena, c) monitoring of long-term change of SST and clouds. The meteorological mission will complement the existing network of geostationary satellites, providing improved input data for numerical weather prediction models, and monitoring climate changes; the data, imagery and derived products will be freely available to both domestic and international community in real-time or near real-time basis through direct broadcasting or land lines."""@en ;
  skos:inScheme <https://gcmd.earthdata.nasa.gov/kms/concepts/concept_scheme/platforms> ;
  a skos:Concept .

