By S Vijay Karthik
CHENNAI
THE historic NISAR mission, a landmark collaboration between NASA and ISRO, has entered its crucial 90-day commissioning phase, during which scientists will carry out rigorous checks, calibrations and orbital adjustments to prepare the satellite for full-scale earth observation.
The critical phase follows the successful launch of the radar imaging satellite on July 30 aboard a GSLV-F16 rocket from Srikharikota in Andhra Pradesh.
Speaking to PTI, Gerald W Bawden, Program Manager for Natural Hazards Research at NASA’s Earth Sciences Division, outlined the key activities underway. “NISAR is inserted at an altitude of 737 km and we need to actually rise up to 747 km and it will take about 45-50 days for those operations to take place,” he explained.
After the commissioning is complete, he said the radars will be activated and it will start collecting data over “all ice, all land, all the time” from the Earth. “The resolution will be 5 metres by 5 metres and we will be imaging that every 12 days. So it is a lot of data. It is more data that NASA has collected in any other mission.”
On the key lessons from the collaboration with the Bengaluru-based space agency for the NISAR mission, the scientist said, NASA learned from the ISRO’s focus on how science can help society, while ISRO gained from NASA’s deep focus on scientific research.
Bawden said the project brought together scientists from two countries on opposite sides of the world, with a 12.5-hour time difference.
“... We had culture differences and the other thing is that we are on the opposite side of the world. We have to work together and we have the common love for technology.” “The two scientists (of ISRO and NASA) are building partnerships by working together, friendships.
This NISAR partnership is more than building an amazing satellite, it is teams that are together to solve bigger problems,” he noted.