US space agency Nasa and India’s premier space agency Isro are in talks for jointly building a satellite for the first time.
‘Now, there is a feasibility study going on whether we can jointly make a satellite, with synthetic aperture radar (SAR) payloads working on two frequency bands - L-band and S-band’, chairman of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) K Radhakrishnan said.
Charles F Bolden Jr, Administrator of National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) of United States, visited the Space Applications Centre (SAC) of Isro in Ahmedabad on 25 June.
He had a meeting with Radhakrishnan, also Secretary, Department of Space, along with senior officials of Isro to discuss the ongoing cooperative activities between ISRO and NASA and also the potential areas of future cooperation.
‘...the joint satellite mission is an important step. It's not making an instrument and plugging it actually. It's working together. That's what we are discussing. It (working together) should happen in the next few months’, Radhakrishnan said.
‘Both organisations are coming together and saying let's develop it together...use your strength, use my strength. That's a good way of working’, he said.
‘It (the proposed satellite) is interesting from scientific point of view, it's interesting from normal resource management point of view,’ he said.
‘Now, there is a feasibility study going on whether we can jointly make a satellite, with synthetic aperture radar (SAR) payloads working on two frequency bands - L-band and S-band’, chairman of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) K Radhakrishnan said.
Charles F Bolden Jr, Administrator of National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) of United States, visited the Space Applications Centre (SAC) of Isro in Ahmedabad on 25 June.
He had a meeting with Radhakrishnan, also Secretary, Department of Space, along with senior officials of Isro to discuss the ongoing cooperative activities between ISRO and NASA and also the potential areas of future cooperation.
‘...the joint satellite mission is an important step. It's not making an instrument and plugging it actually. It's working together. That's what we are discussing. It (working together) should happen in the next few months’, Radhakrishnan said.
‘Both organisations are coming together and saying let's develop it together...use your strength, use my strength. That's a good way of working’, he said.
‘It (the proposed satellite) is interesting from scientific point of view, it's interesting from normal resource management point of view,’ he said.