Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Int’l scientists can access Astrosat data after 6 months

- Snehal Fernandes

Six months on, scientists and research organisati­ons from around the world will be able to use data from Astrosat, the country’s first astronomy satellite,to aid their astrophysi­cs and astronomy-related research.

“The internatio­nal scientific community will be able to observe the source of their choice. They will be able to analyse data that will make their studies more scientific,” said professor JS Yadav of the Tata Institute of Fundamenta­l Research (TIFR), who was responsibl­e for building the indigenous large area X-ray proportion­al counter (LAXPC), the most sensitive detector posals that will be reviewed by the Astrosat science committee. Only the scientific­ally competitiv­e ones will be allotted time to

“Ten per cent of the slots every year will be given to the global scientific community.

The instrument team has able for each instrument in the public domain. It can be downloaded,” said Yadav.

Currently internatio­nal United Kingdom, European countries, and Africa are collaborat­ing with Indian scientists, who are principal investigat­ors, and are observing the same source at different wavelength­s.

After a year, data collected by both Indian and internatio­nal researcher­s will have to be shared in the public domain.

In September 2015, the Indian Space Research Organisati­on launched Astrosat, with five X-ray telescopes on board. Three instrument­s — a soft X-ray telescope (SXT), the CZT array detector, and the LAXPC — were built and assembled by the Tata Institute of Fundamenta­l Research, Navy Nagar.

“The fact that the national and internatio­nal community is interested shows that the instru

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