India's Own Hubble to go up in Space on September 28th
India’s first astronomy satellite will
be launched on September 28. ISRO has noted that while it has launched
payloads capable of making astronomical observations before, this is the
first time one dedicated to astronomy will be launched. Called
ASTROSAT, it was first scheduled for launch in 2005, then in 2010, and
finally in 2015 with delays largely due to putting the scientific
payload together. ASTROSAT will be a multi-wavelength mission, observing
the cosmos in X-ray, visible and UV light.
ASTROSAT is one of two scientific missions that have long been overdue –
the other being the Aditya-1 mission to study the Sun. ASTROSAT
comprises five scientific instruments, all of which had been delivered
to the ISRO Satellite Centre by 2014. They are the UV Imaging Telescope,
the Scanning Sky Monitor, the Cadmium-Zinc-Telluride Imager, the Soft
X-ray Telescope and three identical Large Area Xenon Proportional
Counters. The Soft X-ray Telescope reportedly took 11 years to be built.
X-ray and UV radiation fall in the short-wavelength part of the
electromagnetic spectrum, and their emissions in the universe can’t be
detected at ground level because the high-energy photons that constitute
the radiation can’t easily penetrate Earth’s atmosphere. The opposite
is true for long-wavelength radiation like radio waves. As a result, the
most powerful and effective X-ray and gamma-ray satellites are in
Earth-orbit whereas radio-telescopes – with their giant telltale antenna
dishes – are on ground.
One of the better known examples of multi-wavelength space-borne
observatories is the Hubble Space Telescope, which makes observations in
the UV, visible and infrared parts of the spectrum. However,
comparisons between the telescopes are unfounded because Hubble’s
optical mirror is eight-times as wide as ASTROSAT’s, allowing for a
deeper field of view and much better imaging. Nonetheless, ASTROSAT will
be able to contribute in the study of time-variable sources of
radiation by being able to observe the sources in UV and X-ray
wavelengths simultaneously.
Eleven years after the project was first okayed, the satellite is slated
to be launched on board a PSLV rocket on its 30th flight from the
Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota on September 28. Four smaller
American, one Indonesian and one Canadian satellites will also be
launched as part of the same mission. ISRO has stated that open
observing time will be available on the satellite’s instruments from
September 2016, from their perch in the near-Earth orbit at an altitude
of 650 km. ASTROSAT cost Rs.178 crore.
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