Astrosat |
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| General information | |
|---|---|
| Organization | ISRO |
| Launch date | 2012[1] |
| Launched from | Satish Dhawan Space Centre |
| Launch vehicle | PSLV-XL |
| Mission length | 5 years |
| Mass | 1,650 kg (3,600 lb) |
| Type of orbit | Near-equatorial |
| Orbit height | 650 km (400 mi) |
| Orbit period | 5 years |
| Wavelength | Multi-wavelength |
| Instruments | |
| UVIT | UltraViolet Imaging Telescope |
| SXT | Soft X-ray telescope |
| LAXPC | X-ray timing and low-resolution spectral studies |
| CZTI | Hard X-ray imager |
| Website | http://meghnad.iucaa.ernet.in/~astrosat/home.html |
Astrosat is India's first dedicated astronomy satellite and is scheduled to launch on board the PSLV in 2012. After the success of the satellite-borne Indian X-ray Astronomy Experiment (IXAE), which was launched in 1996, the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) has approved further development for a full fledged astronomy satellite - Astrosat.
A large number of leading astronomy research institutions in India and abroad are jointly building various instruments for the satellite. Important areas requiring broad band coverage include studies of astrophysical objects ranging from the nearby solar system objects to distant stars, to objects at cosmological distances; timing studies of variables ranging from pulsations of the hot white dwarfs to active galactic nuclei (AGN) with time scales ranging from milliseconds to few hours to days.
Astrosat is currently proposed as a multi-wavelength astronomy mission on an IRS-class satellite into a near-Earth, equatorial orbit by the PSLV. The 5 instruments on-board cover the visible (320-530 nm), near UV(180-300 nm), far UV(130-180 nm), soft X-ray (0.3-8 keV and 2-10 keV) and hard X-ray (3-80 keV and 10-150 keV) regions of the electromagnetic spectrum.
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Astrosat will be a proposal-driven general purpose observatory, with main scientific focus on:
Astrosat will carry out multi-wavelength observations covering spectral bands from radio, optical, IR, UV, X-ray and Gamma ray regions both for study of specific sources of interest and in survey mode. While radio, optical, IR observations would be coordinated through ground-based telescopes, the high energy regions, i.e., UV, X-rays and Gamma rays would be covered by the dedicated satellite borne instrumentation of Astrosat.[2]
The mission would also study near simultaneous muti-wavelength data from different variable sources. In a binary system for example regions near the compact object emit predominantly in X-rays, the accretion disc emitting most of its light in the UV/ optical waveband, and the mass donating star being brightest in the optical band.
The observatory will also carry out (a) low to moderate resolution spectroscopy over wide energy band with the primary emphasis on studies of X-ray emitting objects, (b) Timing studies of periodic and aperiodic phenomenon in X-ray binaries, (c) Studies of pulsations in X-ray pulsars, (d) QPOs, flickering. Flaring and other variations in X-ray binaries, (e) short and long term intensity variations in AGNs, (f) time lag studies in low/hard X-rays and UV/optical radiation, (g) detection and study of x-ray transients.[3] In particular, the mission will train its instruments at active galactic nuclei at the core of the Milky Way that is believed to have a super massive black hole.[4]
The scientific payload has a total mass of 750 kg and contains six instruments.
The Ground Command and Control Centre for Astrosat will be located at ISAC, Bangalore, India. Commanding and data download will be possible during every visible pass over Bangalore. Ten out of 14 orbits per day will be visible to the ground station. The satellite is capable of gathering 420 gigabits of data every day that can be down loaded in 10 to 11 orbits visible at Tracking and Data receiving center of ISRO in Bangalore.[1] A third 11-meter antenna at the Indian Deep Space Network(IDSN) was operational in July, 2009 to track Astrosat.
Scientists from Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) have completed the developmental phase of complex science payloads and have begun integrating them before delivery of the 1,650 kg satellite Astrosat. A payload from RRI (Raman Research Institute) is under development, awaiting delivery. The challenges in the design of payloads and Attitude Control System have been overcome and in a recent review committee meeting, it was decided that the delivery of the payload to ISRO satellite Centre will begin from the middle of 2009 and continue till early 2010 to enable the launch of ASTROSAT in 2010 using ISRO workhorse PSLV.[5] As of August 2011, the launch has been rescheduled to 2012.[1]
The Astrosat project is a collaborative effort of a growing list of research institutions. The current participants are:
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