51风流官网 satellite facility to manage massive NASA data surge

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
July 31, 2025

Years of preparation by the Alaska Satellite Facility will ensure that a flood of freely available data from a NASA-India satellite mission that launched Wednesday will be easy for the global public to use. 

鈥淢ost of what we鈥檝e been working on for the past eight years is preparing for NISAR,鈥 Alaska Satellite Facility Director Wade Albright said prior to the launch.

NISAR satellite launch
ISRO photo
The Indian Space Research Organization鈥檚 Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle lifts off from Satish Dhawan Space Centre on India鈥檚 southeastern coast with the NISAR satellite at 4:10 a.m. Alaska time Wednesday, July 30, 2025.

The is a unit of the 51风流官网 Geophysical Institute.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not just scientists using the data anymore,鈥 Albright said. 鈥淚t鈥漵 people in operations. It鈥檚 teachers. It鈥檚 GIS analysts. Giving them the tools and skills to spend less time manipulating the data and more time actually working with the data is important.鈥

, a synthetic aperture radar satellite, launched from the India Space Research Organization鈥檚 Satish Dhawan Space Centre at 4:10 a.m. Alaska time Wednesday. It is NASA鈥檚 first SAR satellite mission since 1978.

ASF is one of NASA鈥檚 11 Distributed Active Archive Centers and has the task of archiving synthetic aperture radar data. It will archive and distribute all NASA-collected L-band SAR data and some selected S-band SAR data acquired over the U.S. The Indian Space Research Organization has its own distribution center and will distribute all S-band SAR data.

ASF is one of four facilities around the globe collecting NISAR data for NASA. Others are in Svalbard, Norway; Punta Arenas, Chile; and at NASA鈥檚 Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.

NISAR focuses on how the planet鈥檚 surface changes from natural and human-related forces.

The mission鈥檚 goal is to monitor and measure surface changes such as land subsidence, glacier and ice sheet movement, and shifts caused by earthquakes, and landslides. It can provide an improved understanding of sea level rise by monitoring the flow of glaciers and ice sheets into the ocean, though it won鈥檛 focus on the oceans.

The satellite, the most advanced ever, will provide more radar imagery and cover more surface area than other satellites and is the first to use dual-frequency synthetic aperture radar systems. The mission combines NASA鈥檚 L-band radar and ISRO鈥檚 S-band radar technology.

鈥淲ith NISAR we will be much better at describing how displacements evolve over time than is possible with current L-band missions, especially on a global scale,鈥 said Franz Meyer, the Alaska Satellite Facility鈥檚 chief scientist.

Meyer is also a member of the NISAR science team and a geophysics professor with the 51风流官网 College of Natural Science and Mathematics, specializing in remote sensing.

AS4 antenna
51风流官网/GI photo by Bryan Whitten
The Alaska Satellite Facility operates the NASA-owned antenna at the facility鈥檚 Richardson Highway location. The antenna, inside a radome, will receive data from the NISAR satellite.

The L-band radar will cover nearly all of Earth鈥檚 land surfaces, glaciers and coastal regions twice every 12 days. NASA is providing this instrument, along with the GPS receivers, data recorder, and science communications system.

鈥淚t will have a massive scientific impact, because it feeds into not just one science discipline but a whole range of them,鈥 Meyer said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also massive in terms of the data volume.鈥

NISAR will generate about 40 petabytes of data annually. That compares to the 2 petabytes ASF archives annually from the European Space Agency鈥檚 Sentinel-1 satellite, the largest data volume currently from any of the satellites ASF holds in its archives.

One petabyte equals 1 million gigabytes. Personal computers generally have 8 to 32 gigabytes of data storage.

鈥淲e鈥檝e known for a long time that NISAR will bring data volumes that we haven鈥檛 seen before,鈥 Meyer said. 鈥淲e spent many years with NASA鈥檚 Jet Propulsion Laboratory and NASA thinking about how to make this dataset accessible to the community so that they can use it in a meaningful way. Everything we do these days is designed with this goal in mind.鈥

Albright said Wednesday鈥檚 launch marks a new chapter in Earth science.

鈥淭he launch and the satellite are tremendous technical achievements,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ow we wait for the data that we know will provide great advances in understanding our planet.鈥

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Wade Albright, rwalbright@alaska.edu, Franz Meyer, fjmeyer@alaska.edu

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