India, Israel to Join Hands on Space Telescope

Author: 
Agence France Presse
Publication Date: 
Thu, 2003-12-18 03:00

NEW DELHI, 18 December 2003 — Top Israeli scientific officials will visit India next week to sign an agreement to put Israeli space telescopes on an Indian satellite, the Israeli Embassy here said yesterday.

Science and Technology Minister Eliezer Sandberg and Aby Har-Even, director general of the Israel Space Agency, will visit New Delhi and India’s hi-tech hub Bangalore on their Dec. 22-25 trip.

The embassy said the Israeli and Indian space programs would sign a pact to launch Tauvex, a set of three telescopes able to image ultraviolet sky, on board India’s GSAT-4 satellite.

Tauvex, developed by Tel Aviv University, is designed to study black holes, the formation of stars and other astronomical phenomena, which could identify further research for other space telescopes such as the US Hubble.

Israel was originally to launch Tauvex through the Russian space program but the plan has been delayed by budget constraints in Moscow, the embassy said.

“Tauvex on the GSAT-4 offers a unique opportunity to perform first-class science that would locate Indian and Israeli scientists in the frontline of space astrophysics,” an embassy statement said.

India and Israel established diplomatic relations only in 1992 but have since rapidly expanded cooperation, particularly in defense and science. Ariel Sharon in September made the first visit to India by an incumbent Israeli prime minister.

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