India’s Eye In The Sky To Get Big Boost With ISRO’s New Radar Imaging Satellite
According to experts, coming just days after Operation Sindoor, RISAT-1B’s launch assumes great significance as it will give the defence forces a vital edge in monitoring India’s sensitive borders along Pakistan and China, as well as for safeguarding the country’s vast coastlines.

Representation Image |
New Delhi: India’s border surveillance capabilities and national security are poised to get a game-changing boost with the launch of the all-weather Indian Space Research Organisation’s RISAT-1B radar imaging satellite, also known as EOS-09, from the Sriharikota space centre on May 18.
The RISAT-1B satellite is equipped with a state-of-the-art C-band synthetic aperture radar, which will enable it to capture high-resolution images of the Earth’s surface under adverse weather conditions such as rain, fog, clouds, or at night. This is quite unlike optical camera satellites that struggle to record images when the weather turns bad or darkness sets in at night.
According to experts, coming just days after Operation Sindoor, RISAT-1B’s launch assumes great significance as it will give the defence forces a vital edge in monitoring India’s sensitive borders along Pakistan and China, as well as for safeguarding the country’s vast coastlines.
RISAT-1B’s radar technology is particularly crucial for defence purposes. It can track enemy movements, detect infiltrations, and support anti-terrorism operations, providing continuous, reliable intelligence.
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The high-resolution radar images can detect even minor changes, such as fresh soil disturbances due to the movement of military equipment, new encampments, or vehicular movement, which conventional surveillance might miss. The RISAT-1B is an advanced version of the existing RISAT series of satellites that have been used in operations such as the Balakot strikes.
RISAT-1B can play a key role in anti-terrorist operations as it can more accurately pick up suspicious movements on the ground as terrorists try to infiltrate across the border.
The satellite features five distinct imaging modes, ranging from ultra-high-resolution imaging, capable of detecting small objects, to broader scans for large-area observation. This wide range provides flexibility in using the satellite for both military and civilian applications such as agriculture, forestry, soil moisture monitoring, geology and keeping track of floods.
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The RISAT-1B is a further advancement of the RISAT-1 satellite and is similar in configuration. It will also complement data from other satellites, such as the Resourcesat, Cartosat, and RISAT-2B Series, which will build a comprehensive Earth observation network.
(Except for the headline, this article has not been edited by FPJ's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)
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