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ISRO Missions and Discoveries

India’s first space observatory AstroSat completes 10 years

Why in the News?

AstroSat, India’s first multi-wavelength space observatory has completed 10 years on September 28, 2025, boosting India’s role in multi-messenger astronomy.

What is Multi-Messenger Astronomy?

  • Overview:  A modern approach that uses different cosmic messengers to study the universe, not just light.
  • Messengers:
    • Light (photons): Radio, visible, UV, X-ray, gamma rays.
    • Gravitational waves: From black hole/neutron star mergers.
    • Neutrinos: From nuclear reactions in stars.
    • Cosmic rays: Charged particles from space.
  • Insights: Light shows stellar surfaces; Gravitational waves show collisions; Neutrinos probe stellar interiors.
  • Example: 2017 neutron star collision observed with both light and gravitational waves, proving origin of heavy elements like gold.
  • AstroSat’s Role: Enabled simultaneous UV, optical, and X-ray observations, tracking flares, black holes, and neutron stars.

What is AstroSat?

  • Overview: India’s first dedicated multi-wavelength space observatory, launched on September 28, 2015 by PSLV-C30 from Sriharikota.
  • Objective: To study celestial sources simultaneously in X-ray, ultraviolet (UV), and optical bands, unlike most single-band missions.
  • Management: Controlled by the Mission Operations Complex (MOX), ISTRAC, Bengaluru.
  • Mission Life: Designed for 5 years but operational even after 10 years.
  • Payloads:
    • UVIT (Ultra Violet Imaging Telescope).
    • LAXPC (Large Area X-ray Proportional Counter).
    • CZTI (Cadmium-Zinc-Telluride Imager).
    • SXT (Soft X-ray Telescope).
    • SSM (Scanning Sky Monitor).

Its Accomplishments:

  • Extended Life: Surpassed design life; still generating data.
  • Black Hole Studies: Captured 500+ black hole births, advancing high-energy astrophysics.
  • Galaxy Detection: Tracked extreme UV light from a galaxy 9.3 billion light-years away, aiding early universe studies.
  • Gamma-Ray Bursts: 500+ bursts studied by CZTI.
  • Discoveries: Identified rare UV-bright Milky Way stars, thousands of times brighter than the Sun.
[UPSC 2016] With reference to ‘Astrosat’,’ the astronomical observatory launched by India, which of the following statements is/are correct?

1. Other than USA and Russia, India is the only country to have launched a similar observatory into space.

2. Astrosat is a 2000 kg satellite placed in an orbit at 1650 km above the surface of the Earth.

Select the correct answer using the code given below.

(a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2*

 

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