“The next mission of GSLV (rocket) is going to be the NISAR mission– the NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar mission, which is a very big satellite. The configuration and capability of the rocket has been steadily increasing in terms of payload capability as well as volume which is going to be extremely useful”, he said.
Somanath was talking to reporters here after the successful launch of GSLV-F14 INSAT-3DS satellite.
Responding to a query, Somanath clarified, “NISAR is not a surveillance satellite.”
“It is purely meant for some application….it has two Radars–one is a ‘L’ band radar and the other is ‘S’ band radar. ‘S’ band radar is Made by India and ‘L’ band radar is made by the US,” he said.
“This data is in the public domain. So you can understand, when the data is in public domain it is not going to be surveillance satellite. First of all, the data will be shared between the US and India,” Somanath, Secretary in the Department of Space, said. The joint mission has a focus on many things. “…because it has image capability for about 12-14 days, imaging of the Earth can be done at a very high precision”, he said about NISAR.
“The satellite would also be able to measure water, agriculture, coverage of greenery across the Earth’s surface, and so many other parameters. It also has the ability to penetrate into the Earth to look at the availability of water in arid areas,” he said.
“So it is a purely a satellite which is going to help in terms of sustainability, water, environment, agriculture–the changes that are occurring on Earth due to climate change. such things are primary focus of NISAR,” Somanath added.
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