A step forward

ASTRONAUT Shubhanshu Shukla, who created history by becoming the first Indian ever to set foot on the International Space Station (ISS), made a safe splashdown off the California coast on July 15. It marked more than just the end of a pioneering spaceflight. It symbolised a new chapter for India’s space exploration.

Group Captain Shukla is the second Indian to have gone into space after 41 years but the import of his voyage is much more ambitious.

India was just taking baby steps in outer space when cosmonaut Rakesh Sharma flew aboard a Russian Soyuz in 1984. Today, it is part of an elite group of nations, which have emerged at the forefront of space exploration. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has announced plans to launch Gaganyaan— the country’s first-ever human space flight— in 2027 and set up a space station of its own by 2035. The first moon landing by an Indian is scheduled by 2040. During his 18 days stay on the ISS, Shukla acquired invaluable hands-on experience in the intricacies of international crew integration, medical and psychological preparation for space travel, real-time health telemetry, experiment execution, and vital crew– ground coordination.

These insights will directly inform and enhance the mission planning, safety validation, and astronaut readiness for India’s human spaceflight mission. His experience will offer both practical insight and symbolic momentum to a nation on the brink of joining the elite club of spacefaring powers with crewed capabilities.

In orbit, Shukla was actively involved in over 60 scientific experiments, a significant portion of which were India-led. These experiments were not abstract exercises. They provide essential insights into the design of life-support and medical systems for long-duration missions, key for India’s ambitions in independent space habitation. Lessons from the Indian astronaut’s ISS mission will prove handy for the ISRO as it to launch an unmanned flight later this year as part of the Gaganyaan programme. After that, an Indian astronaut will be sent into space onboard the Gaganyaan spacecraft. The astronaut will stay in space for two to seven days and return to earth.

Shukla’s AX-4 mission was the outcome of ISRO’s in collaboration with US space agency NASA and multinational space giant SpaceX. As ISRO Chief V Narayanan said, “this ensures that India’s own upcoming human spaceflight programme is firmly on track”.

As Gaganyaan advances with focused precision, it serves not just as a leap in scientific capability but as a powerful symbol of India’s long-term economic and strategic aspirations in space. Beyond its scientific prowess, India has emerged as a credible partner for multinational space missions.

A step forward
‘Will ignite scientific temper’
THE Union Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on July 16 adopted a resolution hailing Shubhanshu Shukla’s space odyssey. A Cabinet communique said, “It will ignite the scientific temper, fuel curiosity, and inspire countless youth to pursue careers in science and embrace innovation.“The Cabinet reaffirms its firm conviction that this mission will energise the national resolve to build Viksit Bharat — a developed India — by 2047, as envisioned by the Prime Minister.”

“It heralds a new chapter in India’s space programme and gives a golden glimpse of our future space programme,” it added.

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