
US, India launch powerful Earth-monitoring satellite
WASHINGTON : A formidable new radar satellite jointly developed by the US and India launched today, designed to track subtle changes in Earth's land and ice surfaces and help predict both natural and human-caused hazards.
Dubbed Nisar (Nasa-Isro Synthetic Aperture Radar), the pickup truck-sized spacecraft blasted off around 5.40pm from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre on India's southeastern coast, riding an Isro Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle rocket.
Livestream of the event showed excited schoolchildren brought to watch the launch and mission teams erupting in cheers and hugging.
Highly anticipated by scientists, the mission has also been hailed as a milestone in growing US-India cooperation between president Donald Trump and prime minister Narendra Modi.
'Our planet surface undergoes constant and meaningful change,' Karen St Germain, director of Nasa's Earth science division, told reporters ahead of launch.
'Some change happens slowly. Some happens abruptly. Some changes are large, while some are subtle.'
By picking up on tiny changes in the vertical movement of the Earth's surface – as little as 1cm – scientists will be able to detect the precursors for natural and human-caused disasters, from earthquakes, landsides and volcanoes to aging infrastructure like dams and bridges.
'We'll see land substance and swelling, movement, deformation and melting of mountain glaciers and ice sheets covering both Greenland and Antarctica, and of course, we'll see wildfires,' added St Germain, calling Nisar 'the most sophisticated radar we've ever built'.
India in particular is interested in studying its coastal and nearby ocean areas by tracking yearly changes in the shape of the sea floor near river deltas and how shorelines are growing or shrinking.
Data will also be used to help guide agricultural policy by mapping crop growth, tracking plant health, and monitoring soil moisture.
Equipped with a 12m dish that will unfold in space, Nisar will record nearly all of Earth's land and ice twice every 12 days from an altitude of 747km.
Microwave frequencies
As it orbits, the satellite will continuously transmit microwaves and receive echoes from the surface.
Because the spacecraft is moving, the returning signals are distorted, but computer processing will reassemble them to produce detailed, high-resolution images.
Achieving similar results with traditional radar would require an impractically large 12-mile-wide dish.
Nisar will operate on two radar frequencies: L-band and S-band.
The L-band is ideal for sensing taller vegetation like trees, while the S-band enables more accurate readings of shorter plants such as bushes and shrubs.
Nasa's jet propulsion laboratory and India's Isro shared the workload, each building components on opposite sides of the planet before integrating and testing the spacecraft at Isro's Satellite Integration & Testing Establishment in the southern Indian city of Bengaluru.
Nasa's contribution came to just under US$1.2 billion, while Isro's costs were around US$90 million.
India's space programme has made major strides in recent years, including placing a probe in Mars orbit in 2014 and landing a robot and rover on the moon in 2023.
Shubhanshu Shukla, a test pilot with the Indian air force, recently became the second Indian to travel to space and the first to reach the International Space Station – a key step toward India's own indigenous crewed mission planned for 2027 under the Gaganyaan ('Sky Craft') programme.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
5 hours ago
- The Sun
US Space Shuttle Discovery relocation plan sparks legal dispute
WASHINGTON: A proposal to move the retired Space Shuttle Discovery from its current home at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum to Houston has triggered a legal standoff. The plan, embedded in recent federal legislation, faces resistance from the Smithsonian, which asserts full ownership of the historic spacecraft. 'The Smithsonian Institution owns the Discovery and holds it in trust for the American public,' the museum stated, referencing NASA's 2012 transfer of ownership. The shuttle, a major attraction in Virginia, draws millions annually. Texas Senator John Cornyn spearheaded the relocation effort, dubbed the 'Bring the Space Shuttle Home Act,' aiming to place Discovery in Houston, home to NASA's Johnson Space Center. The bill, later folded into broader legislation, allocated $85 million for the move—far below the estimated $325 million cost projected by the Congressional Research Service. NASA's acting administrator must decide by Sunday whether to proceed, but legal experts question the federal government's authority. 'Assuming Smithsonian has valid paperwork, I don't think Secretary Duffy or anyone in the federal government has any more authority to order the move of Discovery than you or I do,' said attorney Nicholas O'Donnell. Logistical challenges further complicate the plan. With NASA's modified 747 shuttle carriers no longer operational, transporting Discovery would require an unprecedented land or water effort. Former shuttle engineer Dennis Jenkins estimated costs could balloon to $1 billion. The Smithsonian, while legally independent, relies heavily on federal funding, leaving it vulnerable to political pressure. A court battle seems unlikely, but the dispute underscores tensions between historical preservation and regional pride. - AFP


The Star
16 hours ago
- The Star
SpaceX launches joint astronaut crew to ISS in NASA's Crew-11 mission
NASA's SpaceX Crew-11 crew members, Mission Specialist Oleg Platonov of Roscosmos, Pilot Mike Fincke of the U.S., Commander Zena Cardman of the U.S., and Mission Specialist Kimiya Yui of Japan's JAXA, react as they stand outside the Operations & Checkout Building at the Kennedy Space Center for transport to Launch Complex 39-A, ahead of their launch to the International Space Station, in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S., August 1, 2025. REUTERS/Steve Nesius


The Star
2 days ago
- The Star
Astronauts set for launch to ISS as US, Russian space chiefs plan rare meeting
NASA's SpaceX Crew-11 crew members, Mission Specialist Oleg Platonov of Roscosmos, Pilot Mike Fincke of U.S., Commander Zena Cardman of U.S., and Mission Specialist Kimiya Yui of Japan's JAXA, walk from the Operations and Checkout Building at the Kennedy Space Center for transport to Launch Complex 39A ahead of their launch to the International Space Station in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S., July 31, 2025. REUTERS/Steve Nesius WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The heads of NASA and Russia's space agency will watch American, Russian, and Japanese astronauts launch to the International Space Station from Florida on Thursday, a routine crew rotation flight coinciding with a rare face-to-face meeting between U.S. and Russian space program chiefs. The four-person astronaut crew arrived at SpaceX's launchpad Thursday morning at NASA's Kennedy Space Center ahead of their 12:09 pm ET (1609 GMT) launch to space, where they will spend 39 hours traveling aboard SpaceX's Dragon craft to the orbiting science lab for a mission lasting at least six months. The head of Russia's space agency Roscosmos, Dmitry Bakanov, and his staff are in Florida for the launch. He plans to meet acting NASA administrator Sean Duffy, who took on the space chief role this month, and is also the head of the U.S. Department of Transportation. That will mark the first in-person meeting between U.S. and Russian space agency chiefs since 2018, and a significant moment for a new NASA administrator who has emphasized he is serving only in an acting capacity. While U.S.-Russian tensions over the war in Ukraine limited contact between the two space agencies, they have continued to share astronaut flights and cooperate on the ISS, a 25-year-old totem of scientific diplomacy crucial to maintaining the two space powers' storied human spaceflight capabilities. Bakanov and Duffy are expected to discuss extending the two countries' astronaut seat exchange agreement - in which U.S. astronauts fly on Russian Soyuz capsules in exchange for Russian astronauts flying on U.S. capsules - and the planned disposal of the ISS in 2030, according to Russian news agency TASS. Thursday's mission, called Crew-11, includes NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Michael Fincke, Russian cosmonaut Oleg Platonov, and Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui. They dock at the ISS around 3 a.m. ET (0700 GMT) on Saturday and replace the Crew-10 crew on the ISS, which departs August 6. While normal long-duration ISS missions are six months, the Crew-11 mission may be the first of many to last eight months, part of a new effort to align U.S. mission schedules with Russia's. The mission will be the first spaceflight for Cardman, who was selected as a NASA astronaut in 2017, and Platonov, an engineer trained in aircraft operations and air traffic management who was selected to be a cosmonaut in 2018. "We know that he's in good hands," Sergei Krikalev, Roscosmos human spaceflight chief and a veteran cosmonaut, said of Platonov during a press conference on Wednesday. (Reporting by Joey RouletteEditing by Rod Nickel)