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India`s first multi-wavelength mission Astrosat completes 5 years, scientific data used by 43 countries
ISRO Chairman, Dr K Sivan said that the study of the universe played a major role in defining research of ISRO and AstroSat has brought us into the big league of space astronomy and provided excellent results.
Highlights
- ISRO Chairman, Dr K Sivan said that the study of the universe played a major role in defining research of ISRO and AstroSat has brought us into the big league of space astronomy and provided excellent results.
- He added that the satellite had served its mission life of five years, with all five on-board equipment in ‘very fine’ condition and that it would continue to serve for years to come.
- Referring to AstroSat as a multi-agency mission, Dr Sivan elaborated that academia and R&D institutions had worked in the engineering and testing phase of this project.
New Delhi: The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) on Monday (September 28, 2020) marked five years of the launch of AstroSat, India’s first multi-wavelength mission. The satellite which was launched from the Sriharikota spaceport on September 28 in 2018 is being operated as a proposal-based observatory, covering a wide band ranging from Ultraviolet(UV) to high energy X-rays.
While a vast majority of ISRO’s satellites are meant to serve purposes like communication, surveillance, imagery, remote sensing etc, a handful of missions and satellites are purely for exploring and helping understand unexplored sciences. Such missions are like the Chandrayaan, Mangalyaan and AstroSat.
ISRO says that the unique observation capability of AstroSat in this wide band makes it one of the major space science observatories in the world. According to the Indian Space Agency, AstroSat was also the mission which led to the discovery of one of the earliest galaxies in extreme Ultraviolet light, marking a major breakthrough. Called AUDFs01, this galaxy is said to be 9.3 billion light-years away from earth.
The discovery was made by an international team of astronomers led by Dr Kanak Saha, at the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA) in Pune. This team was comprised of scientists from India, Switzerland, France, USA, Japan and the Netherlands.