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Phase 2: Individual Data Pages

Improved individual data pages across Launches, Re-entries, Conjunctions, Breakups, and Mega Constellations, each made more tactical, more readable, and more useful in real operational conditions.

Multiple Disovery Sessions

Feature and data improvements on individual pages are the next prioritization for Space C.O.P including: 

  • Launches

  • Re-entries

  • Breakups

  • Conjunctions

  • Items of Interest

Based on the discussions after the Summary Dashboard,  Space C.O.P now moved on to focus on the current individual data page to understand how we could make them more tactical and surface the highest priority information for operators. It is crucial that interesting and cool data is available and integrated but doesn’t sacrifice at-a-glance readability for operators. 

Launches Disovery

A discovery session is ran with the cilent internal team to gather more insights about the needs for Launches Data

Re-entry Discovery

Similar to the approach of Launches Page, a discovery session is ran with the cilent internal team to gather more insights about the needs for Re-entry Data since there is a limitation of knowledge about this.

Mid-fi Launches Page

A quick mid-fi prototype created as followed: dark-mode, consistent with the Summary Dashboard, built for speed to feedback rather than finality.

Mid-fi Re-entry Page

Similar to the approach of Launches Wireframe, a quick mid-fi of Re-entry is also created with the updated pieces of data layout using the dark mode components similar to the Summary Page and Launches Page UI design. The goal of this is to save time, create a quick ideation for a combined usability testing with other pages, and get feedback before implementation without losing any current functionality.

Combined Usability Testing

Over two weeks, moderated usability testing sessions were run with SDA operators on both Launches and Re-entry. Open feedback sessions ran alongside — giving analysts space to raise issues that structured scenarios wouldn't always catch.

Affinity Mapping

Key Learnings

Failure and partial failure statuses need to stand out visually

  • T- and T+ countdowns need to be clearly distinct; T- under 10 minutes needs its own treatment

  • Color and icon differentiation genuinely helped them absorb information faster, not decoration, utility

  • Date-based navigation fit naturally into how they worked

  • The first thing operators looked for on Re-entry was the next 12 hours

  • A D-1 to D+3 date range felt right

  • Moving manual entry to an expanded view didn't disrupt workflow at all

Deliverables

Main

Pin

  1. Luanches Page

Main view, pinning, "Concern to Canada" edit modal, expanded history view, before/after comparison.

Main

Pin

Concern to Canads

Expanded View

Before
After
Emily Tran's Portfolio
  1. Re-entry Page

Main view, expanded view, hazardous materials dialogue, ground trace visualization, before/after comparison.

Main

Expanded View

Hazardous Materials Dialogue

Ground Trace Visualization

Before
After
Emily Tran's Portfolio
Before
After
Emily Tran's Portfolio
  1. Conjunctions Page

Main view, visualization, details view, before/after comparison.

Main

Conjunction Details

Conjunction Visualization

Before
After
Emily Tran's Portfolio
  1. Breakups Page

Main view, expanded view with Concern to Canada section, expanded view with breakups dialogue, visualization, before/after comparison.

Main

Breakups Dialogue

Breakup Expanded View

Breakup Visualization

Before
After
Emily Tran's Portfolio
  1. Mega Constellations Page

Main view

What is next?

Phase 2 sharpened the individual data pages. But launches, re-entries, and conjunctions are all events with timestamps. Geostationary Orbit (GEO) is something else entirely. It's a live, continuous picture of where satellites are right now, where they're headed, and what's creeping too close to something that matters. Phase 3 was about building that picture for the first time inside Space C.O.P, giving analysts a real-time view of the GEO belt where Canadian assets, adversary satellites, and debris all share the same space.

Main project