SARAL (Satellite with Argos and ALtiKa)
With the launch of SARAL satellite carrying AltiKa
and an Argos-3 instrument2 is scheduled to be launched on December 2012 and
with this the remote sensing ability of the country will get a boost up.
The SARAL Mission:
The SARAL-Altika mission is a
combined effort of ISRO and the FrenchSpace Agency
(CLS).
CLS, a subsidiary of CNES (French
Space Agency ‘Centre National d’Etudes Spatiales’).
The satellite will map the variability
of the sea level.
It will also provide data to support
operational research in marine meteorology and sea state forecast as well as
seasonal forecast.
The satellite will be carrying the
ARGOS system for CLS and that will help in the transmission of
data from Argo floats.
The mission is complementary to the
Jason-2 mission of NASA/NOAA and CNES/EUMETSAT.
It will fill the gap b/w Envisat and
the Sentinel 3 mission of the European GMES program.
What is an Altimeter?
Altimeter (altitude meter)
Instrument to measure the altitude of
an object above a fixed level.
Altimetry: The measurement of altitude is called altimetry.
Bathymetry: The measurement of depth underwater.
Altika is an the altimeter and it is the prime
payload of the SARAL mission.
AltiKa will provide accurate
measurements of ocean topography, particularly near coastlines.
DORIS (Doppler Orbitography and Radio-positioning Integrated
bySatellite): It will enable precise determination of the orbit.
LRA (Laser Retroreflector Array):
It will help to calibrate the precise orbit determination system and the
altimeter system several times throughout the mission.
What is Argos?
Established in 1978 under a MoU b/w CNES (France), NASA (USA) and NOAA(USA).
NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration).
Argos is a satellite-based system which
collects, processes and disseminates environmental data from fixed and mobile
platforms worldwide. What makes Argos unique is the ability to geographically
locate the source of the data anywhere on the Earth utilizing the Doppler
effect.
What is so special about Altika?
Altika will be the first spaceborne altimeter to operate
at Ka band, operating at 35.75.
Signal frequencies in the Ka-band will
enable better observation of oceans, ice, rain, coastal zones, land masses, and
wave heights.
Dual frequency total power type
microwave radiometer (23.8 and 37 GHz) is embedded in the altimeter to correct
tropospheric effects on the altimeter measurement.
How is Altika different from other existing altimeters?
The present satellite-borne altimeters determine
sea level by bouncing a radar signal off the surface and measuring the
return-trip time.
However, AltiKa operates at a high frequency in Ka
band. Now, this has a two fold advantage:
When we use other altimeter’s, Earth’s
atmosphere slows down the radar signal, so the measurements are skewed and we
have to carry additional equipment to correct for this error. But as AltiKa
uses high frequency in Ka band, it does
not have to carry an instrument to correct for atmospheric effects as
current-generation altimeters do.
Operating at higher frequencies (Ka)
gives higher accuracy. (AltiKa will measure ocean surface topography with
an accuracy of 8 mm, against 2.5 cm on average using current-generation
altimeters).
What is the disadvantage of using Altika over present other altimeters?
High-frequency waves in the Ka band are
extremely sensitive to rain, even drizzle. So, statistically, it is expected
that there will be a 10% loss of data.
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