logo
NASA-ISRO mission — NISAR — all set for launch today

NASA-ISRO mission — NISAR — all set for launch today

Indian Express29-07-2025
IN ONE of its most anticipated missions in recent years, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) will launch NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar), a sophisticated and expensive earth observation satellite developed in collaboration with NASA, from Sriharikota on Wednesday.
The launch will see India's GSLV rocket, for the first time, inject a satellite into a Sun Synchronous Polar Orbit, an orbit in which the satellite will scan over the same point on Earth at the same time each day. Usually, PSLV is utilised for such an orbit, but NISAR is a heavier satellite, beyond the capability of a PSLV.
The GSLV launch vehicle has so far been used to put satellites only in a geosynchronous transfer orbit, a highly elliptical orbit that is used as an intermediary to easily take satellites to the high geosynchronous orbits at around 36,000 km where they move with the Earth to remain over the same location every single day.
'This has been a much-anticipated launch,' said ISRO chairperson Dr V Narayanan.
The NISAR satellite is capable of mapping the Earth during the day and the night and in any weather condition. The satellite will scan the entire globe every 12 days, providing a series of very detailed images of the Earth's surface that can capture changes even as small as a centimetre.
'This is a very advanced satellite that can capture even the slightest of the movements on the Earth's surface. These observations can help them in mapping changes such as volcanic hazard or landslides and prepare in advance. This is a result of a collaboration that started nearly 10 years ago,' said former ISRO chairperson K Sivan.
The mission marks the first hardware collaboration between the Indian and the US space agencies, with each providing a different radar system for the satellite. NASA's L-band radar and ISRO's S band radar are sensitive to two different sizes of features on the Earth as well as two different types of attributes such as moisture content, surface roughness and motion.
The NISAR satellite is meant to capture detailed information about various systems on Earth such as the changing surface and interior of the planet like magma and volcano eruptions, the cold regions with its ice cover, glaciers, sea ice and permafrost, the terrestrial ecosystems like forest cover, rivers, crop fields as well as the water. It will provide important data to researchers across the globe for better management of natural resources, planning for natural disasters, and importantly, understanding the effects and the pace of climate change.
NISAR cannot predict floods or forest fires but can observe the minutest of changes and provide risk assessment analysis.
The 2,392-kg satellite will be put in a 747-km circular orbit nearly 19 minutes after launch. The mission life of the satellite is five years.
GSLV's previous launch, earlier this year, had not been entirely successful. While the launch vehicle did place the NVS-02 satellite in the intended orbit, the satellite could not undertake further manoeuvres needed to reach the final orbit. A GSLV launch had also failed in 2021, owing to a pressure drop in the liquid hydrogen tank in the cryogenic stage.
From the launch date, it will take eight to 10 days for the satellite's full deployment, including the complete blooming of the antenna. Post the launch of any space mission, there is a calibration and testing phase. If the launch is realised on July 30, then NISAR will remain under a 65-day engineering phase during which the preliminary tests and calibration will be performed. On day 65 after the launch, the first, full-frame science data will be taken and the science teams will check for its quality and other parameters. The actual science phase of NISAR will commence on day 70 after the launch. The scientific commissioning phase of NISAR will commence on day 90.
Some of the planned applications of the NISAR satellite include:
• Monitor changes in surface water and soil moisture: This data can provide actionable points to mitigate or better deal with occurrences such as flooding, landslides, crop failures, droughts and wildfires
• Earthquakes: The data from the satellite can be used to map fault zones and fault systems, where an earthquake is likely to occur. Their long-term study can also help in forecasting. Following an earthquake, the data can also be used to locate the areas of damage
• Permafrost: NISAR can observe the changes to the permafrost — the frozen sub-surface layer — that can inform about the communities that may be affected
• Volcanic eruptions: The data from the satellite can be used to characterise and monitor volcanic processes, build models of sub-surface magma movement before, during, and after eruptions. This will facilitate eruption forecasting
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

U.S. in race with China to claim ‘best' part of Moon: NASA Chief
U.S. in race with China to claim ‘best' part of Moon: NASA Chief

The Hindu

time17 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

U.S. in race with China to claim ‘best' part of Moon: NASA Chief

The United States is in a new space race with China to claim the most resource-rich part of the moon, NASA's interim administrator Sean Duffy said while announcing plans to install a nuclear reactor on the lunar surface by 2030. 'We're in a race to the moon, in a race with China to the moon. And to have a base on the moon, we need energy,' he said. Addressing a press conference on Tuesday (August 5, 2025) titled 'Unleashing American Drone Dominance' held by the U.S. Department of Transportation, which Mr. Duffy also leads. Mr. Duffy explained that energy is the key to setting up a permanent base, and that's why he wants a 100-kilowatt nuclear reactor placed on the moon within the next five years. He said such a reactor would generate about the same amount of electricity that a typical U.S. household uses in 3.5 days. The NASA administrator also said that there is a specific region on the moon that is especially valuable and that both the U.S. and China are eyeing it. 'There's a certain part of the moon that everyone knows is the best,' he said. 'We have ice there. We have sunlight there. We want to get there first and claim that for America' he said. Water ice and continuous sunlight make certain parts of the moon, especially near the south pole, ideal for setting up a permanent base. These conditions are important for both sustaining human life and generating power. Mr. Duffy also addressed concerns about launching nuclear material into space. He made it clear that the reactor would not be active when launched from Earth. 'We're not launching this live. That's obviously if you have any questions about that,' he said. While comparing the Artemis lunar programme to the historic Apollo missions of the 1960s and 70s, Mr. Duffy admitted that NASA's current efforts haven't captured public attention in the same way. 'A lot of people don't even know what Artemis is. Everyone knew what Apollo was. We all knew. The whole world knew what Apollo was. We were going to the moon; Artemis is. we're going back,' Mr. Duffy said.

Astronaut Butch Wilmore retires from NASA after spending extended 9 months in space
Astronaut Butch Wilmore retires from NASA after spending extended 9 months in space

Indian Express

time44 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Astronaut Butch Wilmore retires from NASA after spending extended 9 months in space

NASA astronaut Barry 'Butch' Wilmore has announced his retirement after working for 25 years with the American space agency and serving as a US Navy test pilot before becoming an astronaut. His announcement comes less than five months after he and astronaut Sunita Williams returned from a test mission aboard the International Space Station for over nine months, far longer than expected. Wilmore, 62, along with Williams, piloted the first crewed flight of Boeing's Starliner spacecraft on June 5, 2024 for a 8-day mission and gained worldwide traction when their spacecraft experienced several technical issues, including thruster outages and gas leaks. Wilmore and Williams stayed at the ISS for over nine months as NASA and Boeing attempted to investigate what went wrong in their spacecraft and whether Starliner would be safe to carry astronauts home. After 25 years at @NASA, flying in four different spacecraft, accumulating 464 days in space, astronaut and test pilot Butch Wilmore has retired from NASA. Please join us in congratulating Butch on his retirement, and thanking him for his dedicated service to the agency and… — NASA Space Operations (@NASASpaceOps) August 6, 2025 The space agency then decided that bringing the astronaut duo via the Boeing Starliner would be risky and announced in August last year that Williams and Wilmore would join the next International Space Station crew rotation along with two other astronauts on SpaceX's Crew-9 mission and will be aboard the ISS for some additional months. Wilmore and Williams returned to Earth in March after over nine months' stay in space. However, both the astronauts have maintained that they were prepared for their extended stay in space, saying they understood the risks and uncertainty associated with test flying a spacecraft, CNN reported. On his announcement to retire, Butch Wilmore said 'From my earliest days, I have been captivated by the marvels of creation, looking upward with insatiable curiosity,' according to a NASA news release. 'This curiosity propelled me into the skies and eventually to space, where the magnificence of the cosmos mirrored the glory of its creator in ways words can scarcely convey,' Wilmore added. Steve Koerner, acting head of NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, said 'Wilmore's commitment to NASA's mission and dedication to human space exploration is truly exemplary.'

Trump to shut down NASA missions that monitor carbon dioxide and plant heath
Trump to shut down NASA missions that monitor carbon dioxide and plant heath

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

Trump to shut down NASA missions that monitor carbon dioxide and plant heath

The Trump administration is moving to shut down two NASA missions that monitor a potent greenhouse gas and plant health, potentially shutting off an important source of data for scientists, policymakers and farmers. NASA said in an emailed statement on Wednesday that the missions were "beyond their prime mission" and being terminated "to align with the President's agenda and budget priorities".(AP File Photo) President Donald Trump's budget request for fiscal year 2026 includes no money for the Orbiting Carbon Observatories, which can precisely show where carbon dioxide is being emitted and absorbed and how well crops are growing. NASA said in an emailed statement on Wednesday that the missions were "beyond their prime mission" and being terminated "to align with the President's agenda and budget priorities". But the missions -- a free-flying satellite launched in 2014 and an instrument attached to the International Space Station in 2019 that include technology used in the Hubble Space Telescope -- still are more sensitive and accurate than any other systems in the world, operating or planned, and a "national asset" that should be saved, said David Crisp, a retired NASA scientist who led their development. They helped scientists discover, for example, that the Amazon rain forest emits more carbon dioxide than it absorbs, while boreal forests in Canada, Russia and places where permafrost is melting absorb more than they emit, Crisp said. They also can detect the "glow" of photosynthesis in plants, which helps monitor drought and predict food shortages that can lead to civil unrest and famine, he said. "This is really critical," Crisp said. "We are learning so much about this rapidly-changing planet." The decision to end the missions is "extremely shortsighted", said Jonathan Overpeck, a climate scientist at the University of Michigan. "The observations provided by these satellites ... (are) critical for managing growing climate change impacts around the planet, including in the US," he said. Looking to Congress Crisp and others hope Congress will vote to preserve funding for the missions, which are funded through the fiscal year that ends on September 30. A bill in the House closely aligns with the president's request and would eliminate the missions, while a Senate version preserves them. But with Congress in recess, it is unclear whether a budget will be adopted before the new fiscal year that begins on October 1. If it does not, Congress could adopt a resolution to continue current funding until a budget is passed, though some lawmakers fear the Trump administration could try to delay or withhold that money. Congressional Democrats warned acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy last month that it would be illegal to terminate missions or impound funds already appropriated by Congress. Experts said the administration's move to eliminate funding aligns with other actions to cut or bury climate science. "The principle seems to be that if we stop measuring climate change, it will just disappear from the American consciousness," said University of Pennsylvania climate scientist Michael Mann. Backup plan Crisp and others also are trying to put together a coalition of outside partners -- including from Japan and Europe -- that could fund and operate the instrument attached to the space station. NASA said it will accept outside proposals through August 29. The free-flying satellite, though, is at risk of being brought down, meaning it would burn up in the atmosphere. National Public Radio first reported that NASA employees were making plans to end the missions. Crisp said advocates are hoping NASA also allows outside control of that satellite, which covers more of the globe, but there are legal hurdles to overcome because it would mean giving control of a US satellite to a group that could include foreign partners. "We are going out to billionaires. We are going out to foundations," Crisp said. 'But ... it is a really, really bad idea to try and push it off onto private industry or private individuals or private donors. It just does not make sense.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store