Why in the news?

  • The scientists at Raman Research Institute of Bengaluru have developed a compact digital receiver system for a proposed space payload called PRATUSH (Probing ReionizATion of the Universe using Signal from Hydrogen).

PRATUSH Radiometer

  • What is it?:
    • PRATUSH stands for Probing ReionizATion of the Universe using Signal from Hydrogen.
    • Designed as a radiometer payload in lunar orbit, particularly over the far side of the Moon, which provides a shielded, radio-quiet environment ideal for detecting faint cosmic signals.
    • Its primary aim is to observe the Cosmic Dawn– the period when the first stars and galaxies formed, and the subsequent Epoch of Reionization (EoR) of the Universe.
  • Developed by: The Raman Research Institute (RRI) in Bengaluru, in collaboration with ISRO and supported by DST, Government of India.
  • Scientific Importance:
    • Targets detection of the 21-cm hydrogen signal, which traces the state and evolution of neutral hydrogen during the Cosmic Dawn and EoR.
    • Earth-based detection is severely hampered by radio-frequency interference (RFI) and ionospheric distortion; lunar far-side placement overcomes these limitations.
  • Operating Strategy:
    • Intends to observe large sky regions continuously, recording beam-averaged radio spectra with high spectral resolution.
    • The nominal mission lifetime is projected to be around two years, enabling high signal-to-noise accumulation and comprehensive sky coverage.