Joint NASA-ISRO NISAR satellite ready to launch from India
Date:
Wed, 30 Jul 2025 10:00:34 +0000
Description:
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is preparing to launch the  NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar The post Joint NASA-ISRO NISAR satellite  ready to launch from India appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is preparing to launch the  NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) satellite aboard a Geosynchronous  Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) Mk. II rocket from the Satish Dhawan Space  Centre launch site in southeast India. The mission comes just over two months  after its EOS-09 mission failed aboard a different rocket type. 
This launch is just the third ISRO orbital flight of 2025, and the second  flight of the GSLV Mk. II this year after the successful NVS-02 mission on  Jan. 28. The NISAR satellite is scheduled to launch aboard GSLV F16 from the  Second Launch Pad on Wednesday, July 30, at 12:10 UTC, and the rocket will  take a southerly trajectory over the Bay of Bengal to place NISAR into a  Sun-synchronous 98.4-degree inclination orbit. 
 
The 52 m tall GSLV Mk. II, capable of flying up to around 3,000 kg to  Sun-synchronous orbit (SSO), is a three stage launch vehicle with four  liquid-fueled strap-on boosters that stay attached to the first stage  throughout its flight. The first stage is solid-fueled, while the second  stage, like the four strap-on boosters, is powered by a Vikas engine using  storable but highly toxic liquid hypergolic propellants. GSLV F12 at the  Second Launch Pad ahead of the NVS-01 mission (credit: ISRO) 
The third stage uses cryogenic propellants  liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen 
 and an indigenous Indian-made CE-7.5 engine. This stage will place the 2,392  kg NISAR payload into a circular SSO at 743 km altitude. Despite its name, 
the GSLV has launched missions to different types of orbits, and NISARs orbit  will allow it to pass over any given point on Earth at the same time each 
day. 
The 5.5 m long NISAR, incorporating hardware from NASA and ISRO, will observe  Earths surface using a pair of synthetic aperture radars (SAR) over a planned  mission duration of three years for NASA and five years for ISRO. The mission  has enough consumables for at least five years in space, including 265 kg of  hydrazine propellant, with its solar arrays generating five kilowatts of  power. 
NISAR will undergo a 90-day commissioning phase on orbit before science  operations can begin. The reflector antenna deployment process, a major  highlight of this phase, will start 10 days after launch with pre-deployment  checkouts and last up to eight days. 
One day will be dedicated entirely to the all-important reflector deployment,  to be done around 17 days after launch, and which will finish the sequence.  Without the reflector, NISARs mission will be dramatically affected.  Illustration of NISAR in orbit. (Credit: NASA/JPL/Caltech) 
The NISAR satellite project started in 2019, but the groundwork for this 
joint collaboration was started as early as 2007. The National Academy of  Sciences decadal survey prioritized greater insight into ecosystems, solid  Earth, and cryosphere sciences in 2007, and in 2014, NASA and ISRO signed an  agreement to collaborate on NISAR. 
Over the intervening years, teams from both agencies collaborated despite the  vast distance between the United States and India and the worldwide COVID-19  pandemic. Both nations contributed hardware to the project, and the agencies  conducted work in major facilities in both countries. 
NASA contributed NISARs L-band SAR instrument along with the high-rate  telecommunications system, GPS receivers, a solid state recorder, and a  payload data subsystem. Northrop Grummans business unit Astro Aerospace, 
based in California, provided the 12 m deployable mesh reflector antenna that  both SAR instruments will use. The IRIS assembly at the Jet Propulsion  Laboratory in Pasadena, California. (Credit: NASA/JPL/Caltech) 
ISRO contributed a modified I3K satellite bus, based on a standard bus for  3,000 kg-class satellites used for INSAT and GSAT class satellites, as well 
as the Chandrayaan-3 propulsion module. The Indian space agency also provided  the S-band SAR instrument and the GSLV Mk. II launch vehicle and associated  launch services. 
NISAR is the first observation satellite to use two different bands for SAR  observations. The L-band SAR instrument, built at NASAs Jet Propulsion  Laboratory (JPL) in California, operates at 24 cm wavelength and can 
penetrate deeper into vegetation. The L-band observations are useful for  studying biomass, and the L-bands sensitivity to larger features and slower  movements make it ideal for studying land and ice changes. 
The S-band SAR instrument, built by ISROs Space Applications Centre in  Ahmedabad, India, operates at 10 cm wavelength and is more sensitive to  moisture, light vegetation, and changes in smaller features. This makes the  S-band instrument suited for studying agriculture, wetlands, changes in soil  moisture, and changes in vegetation growth. NASA and ISRO personnel posing by  NISAR in Bengaluru, India. (Credit: ISRO) 
Both bands, as well as other bands used by different SAR satellites, allow  observations through cloud cover and at night. The two radar instruments were  integrated into the Integrated Radar Instrument Structure (IRIS) at JPL, with  the S-band instrument being transported from India. 
After integration, IRIS was shipped to India for integration into the NISAR  satellite at the U R Rao Satellite Centre (URSC) in Bengaluru. URSC finished  NISAR before ISRO moved the satellite to the launch site, and the payload  arrived at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre on June 12. 
The NISAR satellite, with a radar swath 242 km wide, will be able to observe  surface motion on Earth down to one centimeter. In addition, the satellite  will measure the motion of Earths land and ice from 77.5 degrees north to 
87.5 degrees south latitude twice every 12 days. The NISAR spacecraft and key  elements. (Credit: NASA/JPL/ISRO) 
The satellite will use SweepSAR technology, which allows for fine spatial  resolution as well as wide area coverage, and NISAR will be the first  space-based application of SweepSAR. 
SweepSAR, developed by JPL and German Space Agency engineers, works by  bouncing a transmitted narrow beam of microwave energy off of the antennas  large reflector, illuminating an entire 242 km swath on the ground. The  signals that strike the ground return to the spacecraft at slightly different  times, depending on the nature of the surface. 
NISAR was built at a cost of $1.5 billion USD, making it one of the most  expensive Earth observation satellites ever built. It will generate more data  on a daily basis  80 terabytes per day  than any other observation satellites  that NASA or ISRO have operated, and this data will be freely available to 
the public. NISAR prior to encapsulation in its payload fairing. (Credit:  ISRO) 
NISARs data and products will be hosted by the Alaska Satellite Facility  Distributed Active Archive Center. S-band products will be processed by the  National Remote Sensing Centre (NRSC) in Hyderabad, India. Data products in  both bands will be made available to Indian government users, distributed  through the NRSCs Bhoonidhi portal. 
NISAR did not have an entirely smooth path to the launch pad. The  U.S.-provided antenna reflector needed to be sent back to California to apply  a thermal coating that would mitigate potential temperature increases during  its stowed configuration in flight. After the coating was applied, the  reflector was sent back to URSC for integration into the spacecraft. 
The two space agencies have a long history of developing Earth observation  satellites and SAR technology. NASA launched the first civilian SAR  observation satellite, Seasat, in June 1978 from what was then Vandenberg Air  Force Base, while India launched its first dedicated SAR observation  satellite, RISAT-1, in 2012. Illustration of the Seasat SAR satellite in  orbit. (Credit: NASA) 
A follow-up satellite, RISAT-1A, was launched in 2022, while RISAT-1B, also  known as EOS-09, was lost in a launch failure aboard a Polar Satellite Launch  Vehicle (PSLV)-XL on May 18 of this year. The PSLV-XLs solid-fueled third  stage failed during its burn and the mission was lost. As the GSLV doesnt use  this stage it was cleared to fly NISAR. 
The NISAR mission is a major Earth science mission for both agencies, as 
India develops greater space capabilities. ISRO already sent an astronaut to  the ISS aboard the private Axiom-4 mission this summer, and plans additional  flights aboard its GSLV Mk. II and LVM3 rockets in the coming months. 
( Lead image: GSLV F16 rolling out with the joint US-Indian NISAR payload.  Credit: ISRO) 
 
The post Joint NASA-ISRO NISAR satellite ready to launch from India appeared  first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
======================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/07/nis/
--- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 (Linux/64)
 * Origin: tqwNet Science News (1337:1/100)