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Objective
Payloads of Astrosat
It is for the first time that a majority of the payloads for an Indian satellite has come from outside ISRO. ISRO has built just one of the five payloads for Astrosat; the rest comes from scientific institutions based in India.
For decades, Isro has had to rely on NASA or ESA data to study high frequency space radiation though India’s Earth-based observatories, including the ones near Pune and Ladakh, had enabled the study of radio and infra-red waves that penetrate the atmosphere easily. The insights that ASTROSAT will provide, therefore, could considerably enrich the global understanding of space, especially as the death of NASA’s Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer observatory in 2012 left a vacuum in the study of high frequency space X-rays.
By: Vishal ProfileResourcesReport error
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