Captured on Aug. 21, this image from NISAR’s L-band
radar shows Maine’s Mount Desert Island. Green indicates forest; magenta
represents hard or regular surfaces, like bare ground and buildings. The
magenta area on the island’s northeast end is the town of Bar Harbor.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
The NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar) Earth-observing radar
satellite’s first images of our planet’s surface are in, and they offer a
glimpse of things to come as the joint mission between NASA and ISRO (Indian
Space Research Organisation) approaches full science operations later this
year.
“Launched under President Trump in
conjunction with India, NISAR’s first images are a testament to what can be
achieved when we unite around a shared vision of innovation and discovery,”
said acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy. “This is only the beginning. NASA
will continue to build upon the incredible scientific advancements of the past
and present as we pursue our goal to maintain our nation’s space dominance
through Gold Standard Science.”
Images from the spacecraft, which
was launched by ISRO on July 30, display the level of detail with which NISAR
scans Earth to provide unique, actionable information to decision-makers in a
diverse range of areas, including disaster response, infrastructure monitoring,
and agricultural management.
“By understanding how our home
planet works, we can produce models and analysis of how other planets in our
solar system and beyond work as we prepare to send humanity on an epic journey
back to the Moon and onward to Mars,” said NASA Associate Administrator Amit
Kshatriya. “The successful capture of these first images from NISAR is a
remarkable example of how partnership and collaboration between two nations, on
opposite sides of the world, can achieve great things together for the benefit
of all.”
On Aug. 21, the satellite’s L-band
synthetic aperture radar (SAR) system, which was provided by NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, captured Mount Desert Island on
the Maine coast. Dark areas represent water, while green areas are forest, and
magenta areas are hard or regular surfaces, such as bare ground and buildings.
The L-band radar system can resolve objects as small as 15 feet (5 meters),
enabling the image to display narrow waterways cutting across the island, as
well as the islets dotting the waters around it.
Then, on Aug. 23, the L-band SAR
captured data of a portion of northeastern North Dakota straddling Grand Forks
and Walsh counties. The image shows forests and wetlands on the banks of the
Forest River passing through the center of the frame from west to east and
farmland to the north and south. The dark agricultural plots show fallow
fields, while the lighter colors represent the presence of pasture or crops,
such as soybean and corn. Circular patterns indicate the use of center-pivot irrigation.
On Aug. 23, NISAR imaged land adjacent to northeastern
North Dakota’s Forest River. Light-colored wetlands and forests line the
river’s banks, while circular and rectangular plots throughout the image appear
in shades that indicate the land may be pasture or cropland with corn or soy.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
The images demonstrate how the L-band SAR can discern what type of land
cover — low-lying vegetation, trees, and human structures — is present in each
area. This capability is vital both for monitoring the gain and loss of forest
and wetland ecosystems, as well as for tracking the progress of crops through
growing seasons around the world.
“These initial images are just a
preview of the hard-hitting science that NISAR will produce — data and insights
that will enable scientists to study Earth’s changing land and ice surfaces in
unprecedented detail while equipping decision-makers to respond to natural
disasters and other challenges,” said Nicky Fox, associate administrator,
Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “They are also
a testament to the years of hard work of hundreds of scientists and engineers
from both sides of the world to build an observatory with the most advanced
radar system ever launched by NASA and ISRO.”
The L-band system uses a 10-inch
(25-centimeter) wavelength that enables its signal to penetrate forest canopies
and measure soil moisture and motion of ice surfaces and land down to fractions
of an inch, which is a key measurement in understanding how the land surface
moves before, during, and after earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and
landslides.
The preliminary L-band images are
an example of what the mission team will be able to produce when the science
phase begins in November. The satellite was raised into its operational
464-mile (747-kilometer) orbit in mid-September.
The NISAR mission also includes an
S-band radar, provided by ISRO’s Space Applications Centre, that uses a 4-inch
(10-centimeter) microwave signal that is more sensitive to small vegetation,
making it effective at monitoring certain types of agriculture and grassland
ecosystems.
The spacecraft is the first to
carry both L- and S-band radars. The satellite will monitor Earth’s land and
ice surfaces twice every 12 days, collecting data using the spacecraft’s drum-shaped antenna reflector, which measures 39 feet (12 meters) wide — the
largest NASA has ever sent into space.
The NISAR mission is a partnership
between NASA and ISRO spanning years of technical and programmatic
collaboration. The successful launch and deployment of NISAR builds on a strong
heritage of cooperation between the United States and India in space.
The Space Applications Centre
provided the mission’s S-band SAR. The U R Rao Satellite Centre provided the
spacecraft bus. The launch vehicle was provided by Vikram Sarabhai Space
Centre, and launch services were through Satish Dhawan Space Centre. Key operations,
including boom and radar antenna reflector deployment, are now being executed
and monitored by the ISRO Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network’s global
system of ground stations.
Managed by Caltech in Pasadena,
NASA JPL leads the U.S. component of the project. In addition to the L-band
SAR, reflector, and boom, JPL also provided the high-rate communication
subsystem for science data, a solid-state data recorder, and payload data subsystem.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the Near
Space Network, which receives NISAR’s L-band data.
To learn more about NISAR, visit: https://nisar.jpl.nasa.gov
Source: NASA-ISRO Satellite Sends First Radar Images of Earth’s Surface - NASA
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