EARTH OBSERVATION
GSLV to launch US-India NISAR EO Satellite
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (Sputnik) May 24, 2017


The NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar satellite.

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) will jointly put a $1.5 billion satellite into orbit in 2021 using GSLV, a rocket for which the US slapped sanctions on India.

Weighing 2,200 kilogram, the NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (abbreviated as NISAR) is the world's most expensive earth imaging satellite. It has been developed to observe and take measurements of earth's complex processes, including ecosystem disturbances, cracks in the polar ice-sheets and other natural hazards.

Nasa developed interest in ISRO after the Indian space agency launched the country's first indigenous radar imaging satellite (Risat-1). The satellite was designed to take images of the earth's surface during day and night under all weather conditions.

After two years of negotiations, the US and India signed a formal agreement for NISAR during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to the US in 2014 when he met the US President Barack Obama. At present, ISRO's Ahmedabad-based Space Application Centre (SAC) is conducting flight tests of the "mini version" of the radar satellite over the city skies.

"We are testing the radar by taking images from about 8 km above sea level. The same area will be further studied by scientists from the ground level to understand the radar's accuracy level," The Times of India quoted Tapan Misra, Director, SAC, as saying.

The collaboration is ironic especially after the US under President George Bush in 1992 imposed sanctions on ISRO and even prevented Russia from sharing cryogenic engine technology with India fearing that the country could use it to build long-range missiles.

"Those were different times. US feared India could use Russia's cryogenic engine technology for developing long-range missiles. But things have changed now with the US and India collaborating in multiple spheres. The biggest example of this cooperation is the civil nuclear cooperation deal between the two countries which ended India's apartheid in the nuclear industry. ISRO's technological prowess and achievement is a major catalyst for everyone to collaborate with India," Dr Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan, Senior Fellow and Head of the Nuclear and Space Policy Initiative, at the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation (ORF), told Sputnik.

Source: Sputnik News

EARTH OBSERVATION
Russia aims for 15 remote sensing satellites in orbit by 2020
Bocharov Ruchey, Russia (Sputnik) May 24, 2017
Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that the remote sensing technologies must be used to boost the Russian defense and security, develop the economy and social sphere, and increase the quality of the state's governance. The number of operating Russian remote sensing satellites orbiting the Earth will reach 15 by 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday. Currently, a ... read more

Related Links
NISAR at JPL
Earth Observation News - Suppiliers, Technology and Application

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

EARTH OBSERVATION
Elbit supplying unidentified customer with missile defense system

Yemen rebel missile shot down near Saudi capital

Lockheed Martin receives new THAAD contract

Lockheed Martin contract for AEGIS system development

EARTH OBSERVATION
Lockheed Martin drops out of over-the-horizon missile competition

Iran says it has built third underground missile factory

Successful test for Lockheed's modernized TACMs

Israel unveils new rocket system for special forces

EARTH OBSERVATION
Drone vs. truck deliveries: Which create less carbon pollution?

UAS Update with NSR Analyst Prateep Basu

SkyGuardian drone tops 48 hours in air

NASA Drone Traffic Management Tests Take Off in Reno

EARTH OBSERVATION
Airbus further extends channel partner program for military satellite communications in Asia

Radio communications have surprising influence on Earth's near-space environment

Navy receiving data terminal sets from Leonardo DRS

European country orders Harris tactical radios

EARTH OBSERVATION
Boeing awarded $1B contract for Redesigned Kill Vehicle

Orbital ATK supplying Army with .50-caliber ammunition

Oshkosh secures Marine Corps P-19R contract

First Piranhas delivered to Danish military

EARTH OBSERVATION
India approves new defence policy to boost local companies

BAE receives contract for Royal Australian Navy SATCOM upgrades

Trump military budget proposal aims to increase readiness

Raytheon in partnership with Saudi company

EARTH OBSERVATION
China rebukes G7 over statement on seas

China says fighter jets' intercept of US plane 'safe'

Merkel warns US, Britain no longer reliable partners

Montenegro's anti-NATO lobby jeers as Trump pushes PM aside

EARTH OBSERVATION
Ultrafast nanophotonics: Turmoil in sluggish electrons' existence

Stanford scientists use nanotechnology to boost the performance of key industrial catalyst

Researchers create first significant examples of optical crystallography for nanomaterials

Molecular Lego for nanoelectronics