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Plane-sized Asteroid 2025 OW will fly-by at 47,000 mph this week, but NASA scientists say it's nothing new

Plane-sized Asteroid 2025 OW will fly-by at 47,000 mph this week, but NASA scientists say it's nothing new

Time of India2 days ago
Not a rare event
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Apophis in 2029
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An asteroid roughly the size of a commercial aeroplane is expected to pass Earth on 28 July, according to NASA . The object, known as 2025 OW, is about 210 feet across and will fly by at a distance of approximately 393,000 miles. That's about one and a half times farther than the Moon.NASA's experts are clear: there's nothing to worry about. 'This is very routine,' said Ian J. O'Neill, media relations specialist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). 'If there was a threat, you would hear from us. We would always put out alerts on our planetary defence blog.'The asteroid is moving at a speed of nearly 47,000 miles per hour. Despite that, its trajectory has been calculated with such accuracy that scientists say they already know its path for the next hundred years.The idea of a fast-moving space rock zipping past Earth sounds dramatic, but it's not unusual. 'Close approaches happen all the time — it's just part of the fabric of the solar system,' said Davide Farnocchia, an asteroid expert at NASA's Center for Near-Earth Object Studies ( CNEOS ).NASA keeps track of thousands of near-Earth objects (NEOs), including five currently expected to pass close by next week. Most are far smaller than 2025 OW and travel at much greater distances. While 2025 OW is larger than most, it does not qualify as hazardous. For that, an object needs to be more than 460 feet wide and come within 4.6 million miles of Earth's orbit.Even so, large asteroid impacts are incredibly rare. According to Farnocchia, 'For an object the size of 2025 OW, while close approaches might happen yearly, an actual Earth impact would only occur roughly every 10,000 years.'Not this time. Despite its size and speed, 2025 OW won't be visible without specialist equipment. 'It won't be visible through binoculars,' said Farnocchia.But there's something on the horizon that could be much more dramatic. A much larger asteroid, called 99942 Apophis , will pass significantly closer to Earth in April 2029 — just 38,000 kilometres away. That's closer than some of our satellites.Apophis, which measures over 1,100 feet across, will be visible to the naked eye. For the public, it could be a rare chance to see an asteroid without needing a telescope.Earth is hit by around 100 tons of space dust and small debris every day. It's mostly harmless and burns up in the atmosphere. Larger strikes are rare but not impossible.The most recent example happened in 2013, when a 20-metre asteroid exploded above Chelyabinsk in Russia. It caused injuries and property damage. Events of that scale happen once every 60 to 80 years. The Tunguska explosion in 1908, caused by an asteroid possibly between 160 and 200 feet wide, flattened trees across over 2,000 square kilometres of Siberian forest. That type of event is expected only once every 200 to 300 years.In terms of size, 2025 OW is in that same range. But unlike the Tunguska asteroid, we know exactly where 2025 OW is going — and it's not Earth.NASA's tracking capabilities have come a long way. Astronomers rely on a global network of telescopes, with data sent to the Minor Planet Center, the organisation responsible for collecting information on small solar system bodies.NASA's CNEOS uses that data to model orbits and predict flybys, often years or even decades in advance. There are currently over 30,000 recognised NEOs, out of more than 1.1 million known asteroids in our solar system.New tools are also being developed. NASA's NEO Surveyor mission, along with the European Space Agency's NEOMIR and the Vera Rubin Observatory, aim to spot more asteroids, especially those that approach from the direction of the Sun — a known blind spot for many Earth-based telescopes.The big event on the calendar is Apophis in 2029. Originally discovered in 2004, early models gave it a slim chance of hitting Earth. But after years of observations, scientists have ruled out any impact for at least the next century.'Apophis will come within 38,000 kilometres of Earth in April 2029 — closer than our geostationary satellites,' Farnocchia confirmed.Its close pass is expected to give scientists a rare chance to study the effects of Earth's gravity on the asteroid's orbit. Some models suggest that this flyby could slightly alter its path, but not enough to pose any danger in future passes.2025 OW will pass silently and safely. There will be no light show, no debris, and no need to prepare for impact. But it's a timely reminder of the constant motion above our heads, and the systems in place to monitor it.NASA's experts continue to keep watch, not because of 2025 OW, but because one day, a different object might be worth worrying about. Until then, we observe, we prepare, and we learn.
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Nisar mission: Once a denier of cryogenic tech, Nasa is now an Isro customer
Nisar mission: Once a denier of cryogenic tech, Nasa is now an Isro customer

India Today

time15 minutes ago

  • India Today

Nisar mission: Once a denier of cryogenic tech, Nasa is now an Isro customer

On July 30, 2025, the Nasa-Isro Synthetic Aperture Radar (Nisar) satellite is set to lift off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota aboard India's GSLV rocket, powered by an indigenous cryogenic is the world's single most expensive civilian Earth imaging satellite. A collaboration between Nasa and Isro, the mission represents a major technological achievement and an even more significant geopolitical three decades ago, the United States actively blocked India's access to cryogenic engine technology. Sanctions were imposed, diplomatic pressure was applied, and international agreements were disrupted, all to keep India out of the elite club of space-faring nations. A LOOK BACK INTO PAST It began in the early 1990s, a time when India's space programme was steadily gaining ground. By then, Isro had developed the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), a dependable rocket that could carry satellites weighing up to 1,750 kilograms into low Earth orbit (LEO) at altitudes of around 600–800 it had a crucial limitation: it could not lift heavier payloads into geostationary orbit (GEO), located about 36,000 kilometres above the Earth's surface. This is the orbit where most communication, weather, and broadcasting satellites reach that altitude with payloads typically weighing 2,000 to 2,500 kilograms or more, India needed a more powerful rocket and, more importantly, a more advanced needed a cryogenic engine. Nisar satellite. (Photo: Nasa) But cryogenic engines are extremely complex. Liquid hydrogen, the main fuel, must be stored at –253C, and liquid oxygen at –183C. Keeping these volatile substances stable inside a rocket, and then igniting them, demands precision ultra-low temperatures can cause metal components to crack, valves to seize, and seals to fail. Most importantly, the entire system must function flawlessly under immense pressure and temperature during launch.A LIKELY DEPENDENCYIn the early 1990s, India did not possess this technology. Without it, India remained dependent on foreign rockets for critical space missions. To gain full independence in space, Isro had two options: develop the technology in-house or acquire it from abroad. Given the complexity and urgency, India first sought to acquire the time, only a handful of countries, the United States, Russia, France, and Japan, had cryogenic was approached first, but negotiations failed to progress. Offers came from the United States and Europe. General Dynamics, an American firm, proposed a deal, as did Europe's Arianespace. The cryogenic engine developed by Isro. (Photo: Isro) However, both offers were expensive and included restrictive clauses that ruled out any transfer of technology. For India, which saw technology transfer as vital for long-term self-reliance, these deals offered little came a breakthrough. In January 1991, Isro signed a historic agreement with Russia's Glavkosmos to procure two cryogenic engines along with full technology transfer, for a relatively modest $200 million. The engines on offer, the RD-56 or KVD-1, had originally been developed for the Soviet manned moon that opportunity soon came under FOLLOWEDAs the Cold War ended and Russia turned toward the West for economic support, the United States began exerting diplomatic pressure. Under the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR), the United States claimed the engine transfer could aid missile development. In 1992, it imposed sanctions on both Isro and Glavkosmos, effectively blocking the its place came a heavily revised arrangement. It allowed the delivery of seven fully assembled engines, but with no accompanying blueprints, training, or transfer of technology. Adding to the humiliation, the agreement included a clause restricting India from using the engines only for peaceful purposes and prohibited any modification or re-export without Russian irony was hard to ignore: this was the same technology the United States had earlier offered India, without objections, and at a much higher imported engines powered the early flights of the GSLV programme. But even as India used them, then Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao recognised the strategic vulnerability of relying on foreign technology. In April 1994, the government launched an indigenous cryogenic engine development programme with an initial budget of 300 crore. The decision would lay the foundation for India's future self-reliance in heavy-lift the formal restrictions, cooperation between Russian and Indian scientists did not completely end. Many within Glavkosmos had developed deep respect for Isro engineers and discreetly supported their components and technical inputs were quietly sent to India, sometimes through covert means. Ural Airlines, a Russian carrier, agreed to transport equipment discreetly in exchange for extra compensation. Many sources state that Nambi Narayanan, who headed Isro's cryogenic programme at the time, later confirmed that he personally accompanied some of these these backchannel efforts were India pushed ahead with its indigenous programme, the United States appeared to shift tactics—from diplomatic pressure to disruption. In late 1994, Nambi Narayanan and his colleague Sasi Kumaran were suddenly arrested on false charges of espionage. They were accused of leaking confidential cryogenic engine data to Pakistan through two Maldivian women, whom Nambi Narayanan had never case shocked the scientific community and the Narayanan was subjected to brutal interrogation and intense media scrutiny. The cryogenic project came to a standstill. Eventually, the case was handed over to the CBI, which found no evidence of wrongdoing. Nambi was acquitted, and years later, on September 14, 2018, the Supreme Court acknowledged the injustice he had scars of the espionage case did not stop AND STEADYProgress was slow and often marked by failure. Multiple test flights of the GSLV in the early 2000s faced setbacks. Engines underperformed, missions failed mid-flight, and questions were raised about whether India had taken on more than it could handle. And western media was in full glee at our breakthrough came on January 5, 2014, when Isro successfully launched the GSLV-D5 mission using a 100% indigenous cryogenic marked a turning point, not just for Isro, but for India's standing in the global space community. Since then, India has routinely used the GSLV for placing heavy satellites in orbit and has become a trusted launch partner for other same cryogenic engine that the world once refused to share has now become a symbol of India's resilience. And in a fitting turn of history, it is now all set to carry an American satellite into space. The deniers are now our customers.(This is an authored article by Srijan Pal Singh. He is an author and an IIM Ahmedabad graduate, who was the Advisor for Policy and Technology to Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam, 11th President of India.)- EndsMust Watch

NISAR Satellite Will Monitor Earth Like Never Before, Says NASA As India Prepares For Lift-Off
NISAR Satellite Will Monitor Earth Like Never Before, Says NASA As India Prepares For Lift-Off

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

NISAR Satellite Will Monitor Earth Like Never Before, Says NASA As India Prepares For Lift-Off

Last Updated: Equipped with dual-frequency radar and the largest-ever antenna ever deployed in space, NISAR is the most expensive earth-observation satellite ever built, at $1.5 billion. At 5:40 pm on July 30, India's heaviest rocket GSLV, will lift off from Sriharikota carrying the most sophisticated radar satellite ever built. The 2393-kg satellite developed at a cost of $1.5 billion, marks the culmination of a decade of hard-work by scientists from NASA and ISRO who persevered through the pandemic to bring the mission to fruition. 'Everything looks good. The rocket is set. The weather is fine. We are ready to go," said Phil Barela, NISAR Project Manager from Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in the pre-launch briefing 48 hours before the lift-off. A team of scientists from NASA-JPL is currently in India working closely with ISRO scientists, as the much-anticipated Indo-US satellite mission gears up for take-off. The much-anticipated NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) is one of the biggest Indo-US satellite missions – that will provide a three-dimensional view of Earth in unprecedented detail. The first-of-its-kind satellite will scan nearly all the Earth's land and ice surfaces twice every 12 days, observing changes as small as a centimeter with high-resolution imagery, collecting earth observation like no other NASA satellite before it. 'We already have over two dozen missions in orbit observing Earth, but NISAR is a groundbreaking mission. It will advance our understanding significantly, with the ability to detect changes as small as a centimetre – regardless of the weather conditions. It has brought India and the US together to study Earth like never before," said Karen St Germain, Director of Earth science at NASA on Monday. The satellite will provide a detailed record of how Earth's land and oceans are changing over time – boosting climate research. The data will help scientists see the precursors to natural hazards like landslides, earthquakes and volcanoes to aid in disaster warnings and preparedness. The satellite worth $1.5 billion with NASA accounting for roughly $1.2 billion is one of the most expensive earth-imaging satellites ever built. While NASA has contributed the L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar – a high-rate telecommunication subsystem, GPS receivers and a deployable 12-meter unfurlable antenna. ISRO, on its part has provided the S-band SAR payload, the spacecraft bus to accommodate both payloads, the GSLV rocket and all associated launch services. The spacecraft will bounce microwave signals off Earth's surface and receive the return signals on a radar antenna reflector measuring 12 meters. Result – about 80 terabytes of data products per day over the course of NISAR's prime mission. The information will be processed, stored and distributed via the cloud – freely accessible to all. 'Any process that moves the land – even by just a few millimeters – NISAR will observe. No other Earth-monitoring mission offers this level of detail and frequency," noted Gerald Bawden, NISAR Program Scientist at NASA. view comments First Published: July 29, 2025, 12:35 IST Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Isro set for major milestone in earth observation with NISAR, an India-Nasa joint mission
Isro set for major milestone in earth observation with NISAR, an India-Nasa joint mission

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Isro set for major milestone in earth observation with NISAR, an India-Nasa joint mission

ISRO is preparing to launch the NISAR satellite, a joint Earth observation mission with NASA, on July 30. The satellite, equipped with dual-frequency radar, will provide global data accessible to all, monitoring environmental changes and supporting various sectors. This five-year mission marks a significant collaboration, enhancing global understanding and management of our planet. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Global relevance Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads All-corner coverage Multi-sectoral impact The Indian Space Research Organisation ( ISRO ) is preparing to launch the NISAR satellite, a joint mission with NASA, marking a major milestone in Earth observation and international collaboration. The launch is scheduled for July 30 at 5:40 pm IST from Sriharikota's second launch short for NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar, will be placed into a Sun-Synchronous Polar Orbit aboard India's GSLV-Mk II rocket, designated GSLV-F16. This marks the 18th flight of the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle and its 9th operational flight using an indigenous cryogenic launch countdown is expected to begin later on Tuesday, news agency PTI reported citing ISRO a significant first, this will be the GSLV's debut mission to a Sun-Synchronous Polar Orbit. The 51.7-metre rocket will lift off from the coastal launch site, around 135 km east of Chennai. Within approximately 19 minutes, the satellite is expected to reach its designated the world watches closely, NISAR is set to not only mark a technological achievement for India, but also shape how we understand and manage our planet in the years NISAR Project Manager and Ground Segment Engineer, Radha Krishna Kavuluru, highlighted the mission's global relevance. Unlike ISRO's earlier observation satellites -- such as the Resourcesat and RISAT series, which primarily served India and nearby regions -- NISAR is designed for worldwide operational satellite will carry dual-frequency radar systems, with NASA contributing the L-Band and ISRO the S-Band. Together, they form a high-resolution radar capable of scanning and collecting data from nearly every corner of the Earth, including remote and challenging environments such as Antarctica, the North Pole and deep oceanic emphasised that NISAR data will be freely accessible worldwide. Governments, researchers, and commercial users from all countries are expected to benefit from its findings. The satellite will revisit every location on Earth every 12 days, providing about 2.5 observations per month and 10 in a span of 120 global coverage will enable critical tracking of changes in forests, glaciers, and mountain ranges -- especially in vulnerable regions like the Himalayas and Antarctica. The mission is designed to monitor seasonal changes and long-term environmental shifts with unmatched precision."NISAR is one of the key missions that will receive large-scale operational feedback from across the globe," Kavuluru said, pointing to its expected impact on sectors such as agriculture, disaster response, and environmental also underlined the strategic importance of the collaboration, noting that this is ISRO's first major Earth observation partnership with NASA. 'It's not just about the satellite. It's about technical exchange, joint planning, and building capabilities on both sides,' he of the data processed by ISRO will be made open-source, reinforcing India's role as a contributor to global science and space technology. The mission is slated to last five years.'This is a highly significant, high-value, and ambitious mission for ISRO,' the news agency quoted Kavuluru as saying.

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