- May 25, 2008
- Posted by: EARSC
- Category: EARSC News
“Our images will be on our website six months from now,” Isro Chairman G Madhavan Nair told reporters here after receiving the Rammohan Puraskar.
Pointing out that certain locations with high security risks were prohibited by law from being imaged, he said, “We are figuring that out. The remaining places, of course, would be on the net.”
Earlier, while receiving the award, Nair pointed out that India had the world’s largest constellation of remote-sensing satellites.
“With seven satellites in orbit, our remote-sensing satellites provide imagery of the earth in a variety of spectral bands and with a resolution of better than one metre. Data from our remote-sensing satellites are received at about 20 stations across the globe, including the US and Europe,” he said.
Nair said the Village Resource Centres (VRC) established in 2004 were providing a variety of space-based products and services, including tele-education, tele-medicine and information on natural resources.
There were 400 VRCs in the country and of these seven are located in West Bengal, he said, adding there were plans to set up 20 more in the state.