Connect with us

Published

on

Encouraged by high-profile successes elsewhere, India wants its private space companies to increase their share of the global launch market by fivefold within the next decade — an effort boosted by the personal support of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

In the year after the country opened the way for private launches in 2020, the number of space startups more than doubled, from 21 to 47.

At the end of 2022, Skyroot Aerospace, whose investors include Sherpalo Ventures and Singapore’s GIC, launched India’s first privately built rocket into space.

“Many times initiatives get announced and they die. This is not one of those,” said Pawan Goenka, an auto-industry veteran who last year was named head of Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe), a newly created space regulatory body. “Space is one of the most favourite areas of our prime minister right now, one that he wants to see move.”

Investors poured $119 million (nearly Rs. 980 crore) into Indian space startups in 2022, up from a total of just $38 million (nearly Rs. 312 crore) in all the years up to 2017. They see a less-costly alternative to European launchers that are grounded or under development, as well as access to a bustling manufacturing hub, analysts say.

That has meant a boom for young space companies such as Skyroot and Agnikul Cosmos — which promise to slash launch costs for satellites — Satsure, offering satellite-data and analytics services, and Pixxel, which in March won a five-year contract from the US National Reconnaissance Office.

“It was a big surprise for all of us that the launch and the policy change all happened on time and we were able to meet our deadlines with complete support. We did not have a single day’s delay because of policy issues,” said Pawan Chandana, co-founder of Skyroot, which is valued at $163 million. (nearly Rs. 1,338 crore).

Other startup founders say the new approach means approvals come easier, stakeholders are aligned with each other, and there are more private industry veterans in government helping the sector.

There are challenges, however. The country accounts for just 2 percent of the space sector’s global revenue, estimated at $370 billion (nearly Rs. 30,38,720 crore) in 2020. Funding has only trickled in, as customers want to see successful launches before committing costly payloads to unproven designs.

“There are some very good companies, but at the moment, we are very behind the US or China,” said Prateep Basu, co-founder of SatSure. “Policy unlocking is very important, but the world will not take real notice until you do something remarkable like what SpaceX did.”

In the United States, the government-operated NASA handles space exploration while private companies do launches and build crewed vehicles. Proponents say that has lowered costs, but it also led to a multiyear gap in which Washington relied on Russian space vehicles to travel to the International Space Station.

SpaceX, which serves private customers and governments, conducted more than 60 launches in 2022 alone.

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) manages all of the country’s launch infrastructure, although Agnikul is planning its own launchpad.

“We realised the industry’s basic need is money,” said Jayant Patil, head of the launch vehicles committee at the Indian Space Association (ISPA), a quasi-government body that helps address private sector concerns.

Patil said the government is offering millions of dollars’ worth of seed funding to startups that use satellite data to boost India’s crop yields. Startups with potential military applications are vetted for government investment separately.

Kanchan Gupta, the Modi government’s senior adviser at the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, said that the country could not afford to lag behind in the space race, and that “everything cannot be done by the government alone”.

“The whole idea is to provide policy stability, predictability,” Gupta said. “Letting the private sector know where the government comes in, where the government doesn’t come in, where they can get in, where they cannot get in.”

‘Self-sustaining’

The privatisation effort began with a late 2020 video conference call between PM Modi and executives, five people involved in the process say. Since then, PM Modi has made it clear he wants to sweep away red tape and create national champions, they say.

“The prime minister’s aim is to do with space what we have done with IT,” said one of the people, who declined to be named because the call and ensuing meetings were private.

ISRO will focus on exploration but still support private launch efforts, giving the country’s space startups global legitimacy, industry executives said.

The agency will work alongside an advisory panel – with members from In-SPACe, ISPA and NewSpace India Limited (NSIL), the government’s commercial launch arm — that helped the government announce a new, business-friendly regulatory framework in April.

Hindustan Aeronautics and Larsen & Toubro, which helped shape the privatisation policies, have a $100 million (nearly Rs. 821 crore) contract to deliver ISRO’s next launch vehicle in 2024.

“PM Modi is a technology person. So the suggestion is to hand over production and development to private players, while we look at technology. It then becomes a self-sustaining environment,” said S. Somanath, chairman of ISRO.

The country’s space companies also hope to find new customers as sanctions and political tensions have cut off Russia from much of the international launch market after the invasion of Ukraine, which Moscow calls a “special operation”.

The British satellite company OneWeb, for example, partnered with ISRO for a launch after Russia cancelled its launches.

“If you look at high technology, it is a matter of geopolitics… India definitely has some leverage right now,”said Laxman Behera, chairperson at the Jawaharlal Nehru University’s Special Centre for National Security Studies.

© Thomson Reuters 2023


Smartphone companies have launched many compelling devices over the first quarter of 2023. What are some of the best phones launched in 2023 you can buy today? We discuss this on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Affiliate links may be automatically generated – see our ethics statement for details.

Continue Reading

Science

Shukla’s ISS Farewell Celebrates India’s Pride, Science, and Space Legacy

Published

on

By

Shukla’s ISS Farewell Celebrates India’s Pride, Science, and Space Legacy

Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla’s farewell address from the ISS capped India’s historic Axiom-4 mission. In his brief speech before returning to Earth, Shukla struck a note of national pride and scientific accomplishment. He marvelled that from orbit “India looks full of ambition, fearless, confident and full of pride”, even echoing Rakesh Sharma’s 1984 words that Bharat (India) still appears “saare jahan se accha” (the best in the world). His remarks highlighted how far India’s space effort has come, framing this private mission as a continuation of a proud space legacy.

A Vision of India from Orbit

Shukla’s words in his farewell speech painted a vivid picture of India as seen from space, as per an NDTV report. By invoking Rakesh Sharma’s famous phrase, he connected the first Indian in space to this new achievement. He stressed that today’s India, like the one Sharma described, projects ambition and confidence on the global stage.

This proud vision from orbit underscored the mission’s role in inspiring public enthusiasm. It also served as a reminder that India’s human spaceflight journey is now firmly under way: as Shukla put it, the challenging path of space exploration “has truly begun” for his country. In these remarks, Shukla celebrated India’s progress while encouraging citizens to embrace the long road ahead.

Science and Collaboration on Axiom-4

Beyond national pride, Shukla emphasized the mission’s scientific legacy. He noted that the 18-day trip aboard ISS surpassed his expectations, yielding “fond memories and learnings”. Along with crewmates from the US, Poland and Hungary, Shukla carried out dozens of experiments in microgravity – over 60 in all, including seven India-led studies on topics like plant growth and muscle loss.

These experiments represent a leap in space science for India, as ISRO confirmed they will provide “critical knowledge” for future efforts like India’s Gaganyaan flight programme and its proposed space station.

Shukla also praised the team effort aboard the ISS, saying the biggest takeaway was realizing “what humanity can achieve when we work with a common goal”. In other words, the mission demonstrated both scientific progress and international cooperation.

Continue Reading

Science

Meteorite From Outer Solar System Challenges Planet Formation Timeline in Early Solar System

Published

on

By

Meteorite From Outer Solar System Challenges Planet Formation Timeline in Early Solar System

A minuscule meteorite seems to be rewriting the history of our solar system. The 50-gram Northwest Africa 12264 has brought a new understanding of when and how rocky worlds came together. Inner planets such as Earth and Mars were thought to have formed earlier than their more distant siblings, given temperatures and composition. But a new study of this meteorite, which originates from beyond the asteroid belt, suggests that the birth of planets throughout the solar system occurred tens of millions of years earlier than previously believed, narrowing the gap in time between the solar system’s inner and outer surfaces.

Outer Solar System Meteorite Reveals Rocky Planets Likely Formed Simultaneously Across the Galaxy

As per a study led by Dr Ben Rider-Stokes of The Open University and published in Communications Earth & Environment, the meteorite’s chemical makeup offers critical evidence. Its chromium and oxygen isotope ratios place its origin in the outer solar system. Most strikingly, lead isotope dating determined its age to be about 4.564 billion years, almost identical to basalt samples from the inner solar system that represent early planetary crusts.

These findings directly challenge the previous assumption that rocky planets beyond Jupiter formed two to three million years later due to their water-rich composition. Ice and water were thought to slow differentiation, the internal layering of planetary bodies. But this meteorite, with its outer solar birth and inner solar age, points to a far more synchronised process of rocky planet formation.

Scientists note that the discovery is also consistent with observations of exoplanetary systems. Based on this and past observations of disks of dust and gas around other stars, the evidence of planetesimals forming quickly and over large orbital separations adds to the argument that early solar system evolution may have been more universal than thought.

As trivial as the time difference might be in the context of a universe, the question is huge. A new timeline of planet formation is not only a retelling of Earth’s history but may also help determine how astronomers think about how planets form in the galaxy more generally, providing new hints about where and how in the galaxy Earth-like planets could take shape.

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who’sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.


NASA’s Hubble and Webb Discover Bursting Star Formation in Small Magellanic Cloud



Nothing Phone 3 Review: Enters the Big League With a Big Price

Related Stories

Continue Reading

Science

NASA’s Hubble and Webb Discover Bursting Star Formation in Small Magellanic Cloud

Published

on

By

NASA’s Hubble and Webb Discover Bursting Star Formation in Small Magellanic Cloud

Scientists from NASA observed the bursting expansion of gas, stars, and dust from the glittering territory of the dual star clusters using Hubble and Webb space telescopes. NGC 460 and NGC 456 stay in the Small Magellanic Cloud, which are open clusters, with dwarf galaxies and orbit the Milky Way. These clusters are part of the extensive star complex clusters and nebulae that are most likely to be linked to each other. Stars are born upon the collapse of clouds.

Hubble and Webb Reveal Explosive Star Births in Small Magellanic Cloud

As per a report from NASA, the open clusters are from anywhere from a few dozen to many young stars, which are loosely bound by gravity. The images captured by Hubble capture the glowing and ionised gas, which comes from stellar radiation and blows bubbles in the form of gas and dust, which is blue in colour. The infrared of Webb shows the clumps and delicate filament-like structures and dust, which is red in colour.

NGC 460 and NGC 456: A Window into Early Universe Star Formation

Hubble shows the images of dust in the form of a silhouette against the blocking light; however, in the images of Webb, the dust is warmed by starlight and glows with infrared waves. The blend of gas and dust between the stars of the universe is called the interstellar medium. The region holding these clusters is known as the N83-84-85 complex and is home to multiple, rare O-type stars. These are hot and extremely massive stars that burn hydrogen like the Sun.

Such a state mimics the condition in the early universe; therefore, the Small Magellanic Cloud gives a nearby lab to find out the theories regarding star formation and the interstellar medium of the cosmos’s early stage.

With these observations, the researchers tend to study the gas flow from convergence to divergence, which helps in refining the difference between the Small Magellanic Cloud and its dwarf galaxy, and the Large Magellanic Cloud. Further, it helps in knowing the interstellar medium and gravitational interactions between the galaxies.

Continue Reading

Trending