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Thursday, 5 April 2012
India set to launch weather imaging satellite: ISRO
BANGALORE: India is
set to launch an indigenous
satellite with the “unique”
capability to capture images
in all-weather conditions
that will facilitate agriculture
and disaster management,
ISRO said today.
India currently depends
on images from a Canadian
satellite as domestic
remote sensing spacecraft
cannot take pictures of the
ground during cloud cover.
After nearly 10 years of effort,
Indian Space Research
Organisation (ISRO) has
developed -- with a lot of
participation from Indian
industries -- a microwave
satellite that has the unique
capability of imaging during
day and night and in all
weather conditions, it said.
“This (Radar Imaging Satellite
or RISAT-1) is about
1,850 kg. So, this will be
heaviest satellite lifted by
a PSLV (Polar Satellite
Launch Vehicle),” ISRO
Chairman K Radhakrishnan
said. “It’s most likely to
be launched on April 26 at
5.45 am,” he said. “It has
taken about 10 years of efforts
in developing this
(RISAT-1)”. The approved
cost of RISAT-1, including
its development, is Rs 378
crore, while Rs 120 crore
has been spent to build the
rocket (PSLV-C19), making
it a Rs 498-crore mission.
RISAT-1 is a “complex
satellite”, Radhakrishnan
said.
The satellite would be
particularly useful in Kharif
season when cloud-covered
atmosphere is frequent. Images
taken from the spacecraft
of agricultural crops
would enable planners with
regard to production estimation
and forecast, the space
agency said. During fl oods,
aerial pictures would give a
clear idea on the affected region
and water level. In addition,
this satellite can even
“penetrate” the ground and
throw light on soil moisture
up to a few centimeters,
Radhakrishnan said.
RISAT-1 would be
launched into a 536-km orbit
by PSLV, which is India’s
workhorse rocket. The
satellite carries a C-band
Synthetic Aperture Radar
(SAR) payload, operating
in a multi-polarisation and
multi-resolution mode to
provide images with coarse,
fi ne and high spatial resolutions.
Radhakrishnan said ISRO
had built two SARs in the
past but these had been
fl own on aircraft.
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