Indian radar imaging satellite
EOS-09 or Earth Observation Satellite - 09 (formerly known as RISAT-1B) is an Indian Space Research Organisation Radar Imaging Satellite designed to provide high-quality images under all weather conditions for applications such as Agriculture, Forestry & Plantations, Soil Moisture & Hydrology and Flood mapping.[ 3] [ 4] It is a follow on to RISAT-1 satellite with similar configuration. The satellite is developed by the ISRO and it is the sixth in a series of RISAT satellites.[ 5] [ 6] [ 7]
Satellite description
Synthetic aperture radar can be used for Earth observation irrespective of the light and weather conditions of the area being imaged.[ 8] It complements/supplements data from Resourcesat , Cartosat and RISAT-2B Series.[ 9] The satellite carries a C-band synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) and has a liftoff mass of 1,710 kg (3,770 lb).[ 2] The EOS-09 orbit is polar and Sun-synchronous at 05:30 AM LTDN, at approximate altitude of 529 km.[ 10]
Assembly Integration and Testing of spacecraft was done by a consortium led by Alpha Design Technologies Ltd.[ 11] Approximate cost of EOS-09 is ₹ 490 crore (equivalent to ₹ 550 crore or US$65 million in 2023).[ 12] [ 13]
See also
References
^ a b c "PSLV-C52/EOS-04 Mission" (PDF) . Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 February 2022. Retrieved 9 February 2022 .
^ a b "PSLV-C52/EOS-04 Mission" . ISRO. Archived from the original on 9 February 2022. Retrieved 9 February 2022 .
^ "EOS-04 - ISRO" . www.isro.gov.in . Archived from the original on 20 March 2022. Retrieved 17 February 2022 .
^ "CEOS Instrument: Synthetic Aperature Radiometer (RISAT)" . Archived from the original on 9 February 2017. Retrieved 9 February 2016 .
^ Krebs, Gunter (8 October 2021). "RISAT 1, 1A, 1B (EOS 04)" . Gunter's Space Page . Archived from the original on 26 December 2021. Retrieved 26 December 2021 .
^ "Unstarred Question No. 4702" (PDF) . Lok Sabha . National Informatics Centre . 29 March 2023. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 March 2023. Retrieved 12 April 2023 .
^ "Mission Summary - RISAT-1B" . CEOS . 2021. Archived from the original on 26 December 2021. Retrieved 26 December 2021 .
^ Raj, N. Gopal (25 April 2012). "RISAT-1's radar can see through clouds and work in darkness" . The Hindu . Chennai, India.
^ "PSLV-C52/EOS-04 Brochure - ISRO" . www.isro.gov.in . Archived from the original on 9 February 2022. Retrieved 17 February 2022 .
^ Reddy, O.V. Raghav (3 February 2016). "Future Earth Observation Missions of ISRO, NRSC User Interaction Meet 2016" (PDF) . Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 February 2017.
^ Chethan Kumar (15 February 2022). "isro: Consortium led by Adani-backed firm assembled, integrated and tested Isro's earth observation satellite | India News - Times of India" . The Times of India . Retrieved 15 February 2022 .
^ "Lok Sabha Unstarred Question No. 4446, Observation Satellite EOS-4" (PDF) . 30 March 2022. The total time taken to realize the satellite is 63 months from date of financial sanction and the expenditure towards realization of satellite is nearly Rs. 490 crore.
^ Kumar, Chethan (1 December 2021). "Teething troubles with indigenous tech cause for delay in 2 Sat launches; humidity halts SSLV - Times of India" . The Times of India . Retrieved 15 February 2022 .
1990s 2000s 2010s
PSLV-C15 (12 Jul 2010)
PSLV-C16 (20 Apr 2011)
PSLV-C17 (15 Jul 2011)
PSLV-C18 (12 Oct 2011)
PSLV-C19 (26 Apr 2012)
PSLV-C21 (9 Sep 2012)
PSLV-C20 (25 Feb 2013)
PSLV-C22 (IRNSS-1A , 1 Jul 2013)
PSLV-C25 (Mars Orbiter Mission , 5 Nov 2013)
PSLV-C24 (IRNSS-1B , 4 Apr 2014)
PSLV-C23 (30 Jun 2014)
PSLV-C26 (IRNSS-1C , 16 Oct 2014)
PSLV-C27 (IRNSS-1D , 28 Mar 2015)
PSLV-C28 (DMC-3 , 10 Jul 2015)
PSLV-C30 (28 Sep 2015)
PSLV-C29 (16 Dec 2015)
PSLV-C31 (IRNSS-1E , 20 Jan 2016)
PSLV-C32 (IRNSS-1F , 10 Mar 2016)
PSLV-C33 (IRNSS-1G , 28 Apr 2016)
PSLV-C34 (22 Jun 2016)
PSLV-C35 (SCATSAT-1 , 26 Sep 2016)
PSLV-C36 (Resourcesat-2A , 7 Dec 2016)
PSLV-C37 (15 Feb 2017)
PSLV-C38 (23 Jun 2017)
PSLV-C39 (IRNSS-1H , 31 Aug 2017, failure)
PSLV-C40 (Cartosat-2F , 12 Jan 2018)
PSLV-C41 (IRNSS-1I , 11 Apr 2018)
PSLV-C42 (16 Sep 2018)
PSLV-C43 (HySIS , 29 Nov 2018)
PSLV-C44 (Microsat-R , 24 Jan 2019)
PSLV-C45 (EMISAT , 1 Apr 2019)
PSLV-C46 (RISAT-2B , 22 May 2019)
PSLV-C47 (Cartosat-3 , 27 Nov 2019)
PSLV-C48 (RISAT-2BR1 , 11 Dec 2019)
2020s
PSLV-C49 (EOS-01 , 7 Nov 2020)
PSLV-C50 (CMS-01 , 17 Dec 2020)
PSLV-C51 (Amazônia-1 , 28 Feb 2021)
PSLV-C52 (EOS-04 , 14 Feb 2022)
PSLV-C53 (DS-EO, NeuSAR, Scoob-1, POEM-1 (hosted), 30 Jun 2022)
PSLV-C54 (EOS-06, BhutanSat aka INS-2B, Anand, 26 Nov 2022)
PSLV-C55 (TeLEOS-2, Lumelite-4, POEM-2 (hosted), 22 Apr 2023)
PSLV-C56 (DS-SAR, VELOX-AM, 30 Jul 2023)
PSLV-C57 (Aditya-L1 , 2 Sep 2023)
PSLV-C58 (XPoSat , POEM-3 (hosted), 1 Jan 2024)
PSLV-C59 (PROBA-3 , 5 Dec 2024)
Satellites
Communication Earth observation Experimental Navigation Student satellites
Space probes
Human spaceflight
Future spacecraft in italics .
January
Starlink G4-5 (49 satellites)
ION-SCV 004 (LabSat , STORK-1 , STORK-2 , SW1FT ), Capella 7 , Capella 8 , ICEYE X14 , ICEYE X16 , USA-320 , USA-321 , USA-322 , USA-323 , DEWA SAT-1 , Flock 4x × 44, Kepler × 4, Lemur-2 × 5, Nepal PQ-1
Lemur-2 Krywe , STORK-3 , TechEdSat-13 , Unicorn-1 , Unicorn-2 × 4
Shiyan 13
Starlink G4-6 (49 satellites)
USA-324 / GSSAP-5 , USA-325 / GSSAP-6
CSG-2
February March April May
SpaceBEE × 16, SpaceBEE NZ × 8, Unicorn-2F
Jilin-1 Kuanfu-01C , Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D × 7
Starlink G4-17 (53 satellites)
Tianzhou 4
Jilin-1 Mofang-01A †
Starlink G4-13 (53 satellites)
Starlink G4-15 (53 satellites)
Starlink G4-18 (53 satellites)
Kosmos 2556 / Bars-M 3L
Boe OFT-2
ION-SCV 006 (SBUDNIC ), SHERPA AC1 , Vigoride-3 , ICEYE × 5, ÑuSat × 4, Lemur-2 × 5, Platform 1 , PTD-3
June July August September October November
LDPE-2 , USA-339 / Shepherd Demonstration, USA-340 , USA-341 , USA-344 / USUVL
Kosmos 2563 / EKS-6
Hotbird 13G
MATS
ChinaSat 19
Cygnus NG-18 (SpaceTuna1 )
NOAA-21 , LOFTID
Yunhai-3 01
Tianzhou 5
Galaxy 31 , Galaxy 32
Yaogan 34-03
Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D × 5
Artemis I (ArgoMoon , BioSentinel , CuSP , EQUULEUS , LunaH-Map , Lunar IceCube , LunIR , Near-Earth Asteroid Scout , OMOTENASHI , Team Miles )
Eutelsat 10B
EOS-06 / Oceansat-3 , Astrocast × 4
SpaceX CRS-26
Yaogan 36-03 (3 satellites)
Kosmos 2564 / GLONASS-M 761
Shenzhou 15
Kosmos 2565 / Lotos-S1 №6 (Kosmos 2566 )
Oceansat-3
December Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).