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The PSLV-C46 is set to launch RISAT-2B from Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota.
RISAT Constellation
RISAT-2B, short for “Radar Imaging Satellite-2B”, is the second in a series of satellites used to observe weather conditions on Earth using radar imagery.
RISAT-2 was the first satellite in the series, launched for the purpose of surveillance. RISAT-1 was launched later, to become India’s first all-weather radar imaging satellite.
RISAT-2B is to be followed by RISAT-2BR1, 2BR2, RISAT-1A, 1B, 2A and so on.
ISRO orbited its first two radar satellites in 2009 & 2012 and it plans to deploy four or five of them in 2019 alone.
A constellation of such space-based radars means a comprehensive vigil over the country.
Once operational, the satellite will be capable of monitoring weather day and night, in all weather conditions.
About PSLV-C46
The PSLV-C46 mission is ISRO’s 48 PSLV launch, and the 14th PSLV Core-Alone (CA) mission.
The PSLV was the first of ISRO’s rockets to be equipped with liquid rocket stages.
In the PSLV-CA version, the rocket doesn’t have the six strap-on boosters that larger rockets do, and only uses the four core stages of the PSLV to launch its payload.
Utility of this constellation
When it is cloudy or dark, ‘regular’ remote-sensing or optical imaging satellites — which work like a light-dependent camera — cannot perceive hidden or surreptitious objects on the ground.
Satellites that are equipped with an active sensor, the synthetic aperture radar (SAR), can sense or ‘observe’ Earth in a special way from space day and night, rain or cloud.
This all-weather seeing feature is what makes them special for security forces and disaster relief agencies.
In India we also use radar imaging for crop estimation because our main crop growing season of kharif is in May-September when it rains and gets cloudy.
We have used this data extensively for forestry, soil, land use, geology and during floods and cyclone.
Radar imaging satellites pick up structures, new bunkers very well, and sometimes help to count them, too.
By: VISHAL GOYAL ProfileResourcesReport error
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