Data from NISAR will map changes to Earth’s surface, helping improve crop management, natural hazard monitoring, and tracking of sea ice and glaciers. A new U.S.-India satellite called NISAR ...
NISAR, a new Earth-observing satellite, is a collaboration between NASA and India’s space agency. By Kenneth Chang A new radar satellite, built by NASA and India’s space agency, launched on Wednesday.
Newspoint on MSN
NISAR to be declared operational on Nov 7: ISRO chief
NASA and ISRO are all set to declare their first-ever jointly developed NISAR satellite operational on Friday, ISRO chairman ...
NISAR is "the most sophisticated radar we have ever built." A joint Earth-observing satellite from the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) and NASA is ready for launch. A Geosynchronous ...
A new satellite mission is scheduled to launch on July 30, marking a significant milestone in the new partnership between the United States and India. The new partnership marks a historic milestone ...
Satellites in low-Earth orbit play a key role in helping us study and understand our planet. Orbiting at altitudes usually between 100 and 1200 miles (160 and 2,000 kilometers), these satellites are ...
NISAR is first NASA-ISRO joint radar imaging satellite mission $1.5 bln satellite will map entire planet every 12 days Data will aid climate, disaster, and environmental monitoring BENGALURU, July 30 ...
NASA and India Reveal NISAR’s first glimpse of Earth science in stunning detail The first radar images from the joint NISAR satellite mission show detailed views of Maine’s coast and the wetlands in ...
A first-of-its-kind satellite has launched to track nearly imperceptible changes on Earth’s surface, an effort that could aid with responses to natural disasters. Called the NASA-ISRO Synthetic ...
A new U.S.–India satellite called NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar) will provide high-resolution data enabling scientists to comprehensively monitor the planet's land and ice surfaces like ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results