Send-off ceremony of science instrument payload of NISAR held at NASA's JPL Home/Activities/Future Missions/Send-off ceremony of science instrument payload of NISAR held at NASA's JPL
Feb 03, 2023
A Send-off ceremony of science instrument payload of NISAR held at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) on Feb 3, 2023. Shri S Somanath, Secretary, DOS / Chairman, ISRO, Sripriya Ranganathan, Indian Ambassador and Deputy Chief of Mission, officials from ISRO, NASA were present during the ceremony.
NASA-ISRO SAR (NISAR) is a Low Earth Orbit (LEO) observatory being jointly developed by NASA and ISRO. It carries L and S dual band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), which operates with Sweep SAR technique to achieve large swath with high resolution data. The SAR payloads mounted on Integrated Radar Instrument Structure (IRIS) and the spacecraft bus are together called an observatory
The NISAR observatory carries a 12m wide deployable mesh reflector mounted onto a deployable 9m boom developed by JPL which shall be used by both-JPL-NASA developed L-Band SAR payload system and ISRO developed S-Band SAR payload.
“Today we come one step closer to fulfilling the immense scientific potential NASA and ISRO envisioned for NISAR when we joined forces more than eight years ago,” Somanath said. “This mission will be a powerful demonstration of the capability of radar as a science tool and help us study Earth's dynamic land and ice surfaces in greater detail than ever before.”
Officials from NASA, ISRO, JPL, and the Indian Embassy held a send-off ceremony before the NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) science instrument payload is transported to southern India for integration with the spacecraft bus, further testing, and launch in 2024Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Officials from NASA, ISRO, and the Indian Embassy visit a JPL clean room to view the scientific instrument payload for the NISAR missionCredits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
NASA's NISAR Project Manager Phil Barela speaks in a JPL clean room with ISRO Chairman S. Somanath and other officials from NASA, ISRO, and the Indian Embassy about the science instrument payload for the NISAR mission. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Engineers and technicians work on the science instrument payload for the NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) mission in a JPL clean room.Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
NISAR in the clean room.
NISAR is loaded to the thermovac.
NISAR inside CATF.