The NISAR mission will help researchers get a better
understanding of how Earth’s surface changes over time, including in the
lead-up to volcanic eruptions like the one pictured, at Mount Redoubt in
southern Alaska in April 2009.
R.G. McGimsey/AVO/USGS
Data from NISAR will improve our understanding of such phenomena as
earthquakes, volcanoes, and landslides, as well as damage to infrastructure.
We don’t always notice it, but much
of Earth’s surface is in constant motion. Scientists have used satellites and
ground-based instruments to track land movement associated with volcanoes,
earthquakes, landslides, and other phenomena. But a new satellite from NASA and
the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) aims to improve what we know and,
potentially, help us prepare for and recover from natural and human-caused
disasters.
The NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar) mission will measure the motion
of nearly all of the planet’s land and ice-covered surfaces twice every 12
days. The pace of NISAR’s data collection will give researchers a fuller
picture of how Earth’s surface changes over time. “This kind of regular
observation allows us to look at how Earth’s surface moves across nearly the
entire planet,” said Cathleen Jones, NISAR applications lead at NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
Together with complementary measurements from other satellites and instruments, NISAR’s data will provide a more complete picture of how Earth’s surface moves horizontally and vertically. The information will be crucial to better understanding everything from the mechanics of Earth’s crust to which parts of the world are prone to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. It could even help resolve whether sections of a levee are damaged or if a hillside is starting to move in a landslide.
The NISAR mission will measure the motion of
Earth’s surface — data that can be used to monitor critical
infrastructure such as airport runways, dams, and levees. NASA/JPL-Caltech
What Lies
Beneath
Targeting an early 2025 launch from
India, the mission will be able to detect surface motions down to fractions of
an inch. In addition to monitoring changes to Earth’s surface, the satellite
will be able to track the motion of ice sheets, glaciers, and sea ice, and map changes to vegetation.
The source of that remarkable
detail is a pair of radar instruments that operate at long wavelengths: an L-band
system built by JPL and an S-band system built by ISRO. The NISAR satellite is
the first to carry both. Each instrument can collect measurements day and night
and see through clouds that can obstruct the view of optical instruments. The
L-band instrument will also be able to penetrate dense vegetation to measure
ground motion. This capability will be especially useful in areas surrounding
volcanoes or faults that are obscured by vegetation.
“The NISAR satellite won’t tell us
when earthquakes will happen. Instead, it will help us better understand which
areas of the world are most susceptible to significant earthquakes,” said Mark
Simons, the U.S. solid Earth science lead for the mission at Caltech in
Pasadena, California.
Data from the satellite will give
researchers insight into which parts of a fault slowly move without producing
earthquakes and which sections are locked together and might suddenly slip. In
relatively well-monitored areas like California, researchers can use NISAR to
focus on specific regions that could produce an earthquake. But in parts of the
world that aren’t as well monitored, NISAR measurements could reveal new
earthquake-prone areas. And when earthquakes do occur, data from the satellite
will help researchers understand what happened on the faults that ruptured.
“From the ISRO perspective, we are
particularly interested in the Himalayan plate boundary,” said Sreejith K M,
the ISRO solid Earth science lead for NISAR at the Space Applications Center in
Ahmedabad, India. “The area has produced great magnitude earthquakes in the
past, and NISAR will give us unprecedented information on the seismic hazards
of the Himalaya.”
Surface motion is also important
for volcano researchers, who need data collected regularly over time to detect
land movements that may be precursors to an eruption. As magma shifts below Earth’s surface, the land can
bulge or sink. The NISAR satellite will help provide a fuller picture for why a
volcano deforms and whether that movement signals an eruption.
Finding Normal
When it comes to infrastructure
such as levees, aqueducts, and dams, NISAR’s ability to provide continuous
measurements over years will help to establish the usual state of the
structures and surrounding land. Then, if something changes, resource managers
may be able to pinpoint specific areas to examine. “Instead of going out and
surveying an entire aqueduct every five years, you can target your surveys to
problem areas,” said Jones.
The data could be equally valuable
for showing that a dam hasn’t changed after a disaster like an earthquake. For
instance, if a large earthquake struck San Francisco, liquefaction — where
loosely packed or waterlogged sediment loses its stability after severe ground
shaking — could pose a problem for dams and levees along the Sacramento-San
Joaquin River Delta.
“There’s over a thousand miles of
levees,” said Jones. “You’d need an army to go out and look at them all.” The
NISAR mission would help authorities survey them from space and identify
damaged areas. “Then you can save your time and only go out to inspect areas
that have changed. That could save a lot of money on repairs after a disaster.”
More About
NISAR
The NISAR mission is an equal collaboration between NASA and ISRO and marks the first time the two agencies have cooperated on hardware development for an Earth-observing mission. Managed for the agency by Caltech, JPL leads the U.S. component of the project and is providing the mission’s L-band SAR. NASA is also providing the radar reflector antenna, the deployable boom, a high-rate communication subsystem for science data, GPS receivers, a solid-state recorder, and payload data subsystem. The U R Rao Satellite Centre in Bengaluru, India, which leads the ISRO component of the mission, is providing the spacecraft bus, the launch vehicle, and associated launch services and satellite mission operations. The ISRO Space Applications Centre in Ahmedabad is providing the S-band SAR electronics.
By: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Source: Powerful New US-Indian Satellite Will Track Earth’s Changing Surface - NASA
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