Earth Observation Satellite-6 (EOS-6) Launched
The third generation Indian satellite for monitoring the oceans, formally named as Earth Observation Satellite-6 (EOS-6) was launched today by the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) in partnership with Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES) among others, from its First Launch Pad (FLP) at Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC), Sriharikota.
The ocean observing mission is a follow up to OceanSat-1
or IRS-P4 and OceanSat-2 launched in 1999 and 2009, respectively. The satellite
was launched aboard the proven launch vehicle PSLV (Polar Satellite Launch
Vehicle) on its 56th flight
(24th flight of the
PSLV-XL version). Today’s launch, designed as PSLV-C54, also accommodated other
small satellites along with Oceansat-3.
The Oceansat-3 was placed in the polar orbit at the
height of about 740 kilometers above sea level. While at ~1100 kilograms, it is
only slightly heavier than Oceansat-1, for the first time in this series it
houses three ocean observing sensors viz Ocean Color Monitor (OCM-3), Sea
Surface Temperature Monitor (SSTM), and Ku-Band scatterometer (SCAT-3). There
is also an ARGOS payload. All these sensors have their own importance for
India’s blue economy aspirations.
The advance 13 channel OCM with 360 m spatial resolution
and 1400 km swath will observe the day side of the earth every day and will
provide crucial data on distribution of ocean algae which is the base of the
food chain within marine ecosystem. The OCM-3 with high signal-to-noise ratio
is expected to provide improved accuracy in daily monitoring of phytoplankton
having wide range of operational and research applications including fishery
resource management, ocean carbon uptake, harmful algal bloom alerts, and
climate studies.
The SSTM will provide ocean surface temperature which is
a critical ocean parameter to provide various forecasts ranging from fish
aggregation to cyclone genesis and movement. Temperature is a key parameter
required to monitor health of the coral reefs, and if needed, to provide coral
bleaching alerts. The Ku-Band Pencil beam scatterometer onboard EOS-6 will
provide high resolution wind vector (speed and direction) at the ocean surface,
something which any seafarer would like to know of, whether its fishermen or
shipping company. The data of temperature and wind is also very important for
assimilation into ocean and weather models to improve their forecast
accuracies. ARGOS is a communication payload jointly developed with France and
it is used for low-power (energy-efficient) communications including marine
robotic floats (Argo floats), fish-tags, drifters, and distress alert devices
useful for conducting effective search and rescue operations.
This launch also includes:
The Thybolt is a 0.5U
spacecraft bus that includes a communication payload to enable rapid technology
demonstration and constellation development for multiple users from Dhruva
Space using their own Orbital Deployer with a minimum lifetime of 1 year, was
deployed in the intended orbit.
The
Anand three axis stabilized Nano satellite is a technology demonstrator for
miniaturized electro-optical payload and all other sub-systems like TTC, power,
onboard computer and ADCS from Pixxel, India was also placed in the orbit
successfully
INDIA-BHUTAN
SAT a collaborative mission between India and Bhutan is INS-2B satellite for
Bhutan with two payloadsviz. NanoMx, a multispectral optical imaging payload
developed by Space Applications Centre (SAC) and APRS-Digipeater which is
jointly developed by DITT-Bhutan and URSC was successfully deployed.
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