
Shubhanshu Shukla, first Indian in space in 41 Years, wll blast off in a Musk rocket
Shubhanshu Shukla (left) and specialist Slawosz Uznanski of Poland reviewing a procedure checklist card during training at Nasa's Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas on Sept 6, 2024. - AFP
NEW DELHI: More than four decades after the first person from India went to space, the nation is finally about to have a sequel.
Shubhanshu Shukla, an Indian Air Force test pilot, will be one of four astronauts aboard a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft on a flight scheduled to launch on Wednesday (June 11) from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The mission will be operated by Texas-based startup Axiom Space and will have a multinational crew that will also include Commander Peggy Whitson of the US, Mission Specialist Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of Poland and Mission Specialist Tibor Kapu of Hungary. They will spend as many as 14 days at the International Space Station.
No Indian has been in orbit since Rakesh Sharma, who flew on a Soviet rocket in 1984, and the return to space has created a flurry of excitement in the South Asian nation.
In Mr Shubhanshu Shukla's hometown of Lucknow, posters wishing the Indian Air Force test pilot him luck dot the city. - AFP
In Shukla's hometown of Lucknow, about 560km (348 miles) east of New Delhi, posters wishing him luck dot the city and passersby stop and click selfies with his cut-outs.
Local media reported how Israeli astronaut Eytan Stibbe, part of a 2022 Axiom mission to the ISS, met Shukla's family last month and addressed their anxieties.
Shukla's flight will be the opening act for Narendra Modi's space ambitions in the coming years as his government tries to narrow the gap with nations such as China, which operates its own space station and has plans for a crewed lunar mission by 2030.
India landed a robotic spacecraft near the moon's south pole in 2023, and the state-run Indian Space Research Organisation aims to launch Shukla and three other Indian astronauts on one of the agency's own rockets in 2027 for India's first crewed space mission.
Other plans include Nisar, a joint US-India Earth-observation mission that Nasa and Isro are targeting to launch this month from the Indian agency's space center in Sriharikota, near Chennai. Isro also wants to create an Indian space station by 2035 and put an Indian astronaut on the moon by 2040.
India's decision to deepen its space exploration efforts has won support from the global space community.
Last month, the European Space Agency signed a statement of intent to cooperate with Isro on space exploration and a delegation from Japan's space agency went to Isro headquarters to discuss plans for a lunar mission.
"It is India's time now,' said Sudheer Kumar N, former director at Isro's Capacity Building Program Office and an adviser on space projects. India can benefit from the country's ability to complete missions at a competitive cost and Modi's policy to encourage private-sector investment in the industry, he said.
India's return to space was briefly threatened last week by the crossfire between the US President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk after Musk said in a social media post that he was going to decommission SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft that's supposed to carry Shukla and others to the ISS. This was after Trump spoke of cancelling Musk's government subsidies and contracts.
Hours later, Musk clarified Dragon will not be decommissioned.
Shukla's mission could provide important input for the Gaganyaan programme, Isro's human spaceflight initiative.
For instance, as part of a joint project between Isero and Nasa, he will take fenugreek seeds and mung beans to germinate in space. Investigating space's impact on the plants could help future missions produce food, according to Nasa.
"The feedback, learnings from this trip will be used in fine tuning and planning the Gaganyaan mission,' said Kumar. - Bloomberg
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
10 hours ago
- The Star
US arrests another Chinese scientist with no permit to send biological material
Another Chinese researcher has been arrested upon entering the United States, amid an escalating federal probe into the alleged smuggling of biological materials – marking the second such case in less than a week. Han Chengxuan, a PhD candidate at Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST) in Wuhan, was accused of shipping four undeclared packages containing biological materials from China to a University of Michigan lab—and lying to federal agents about it. Her arrest on Sunday followed charges filed last Tuesday against Yunqing Jian and Zunyong Liu, also Chinese nationals affiliated with the University of Michigan, who allegedly attempted to smuggle a crop pathogen capable of causing widespread agricultural damage in the US. Han, a student at HUST's College of Life Science and Technology, was stopped by Customs and Border Protection officers on Sunday after landing at Detroit Metropolitan Airport on a J1 visa, according to a Department of Justice statement. She allegedly made false statements to the officers before ultimately admitting to the FBI that she sent the packages, which contained 'biological material related to round worms.' Investigators also found that her phone data had been wiped three days before her arrival, according to the statement. Roundworms are slender, tube-shaped parasites. Ranging from microscopic to several inches long, they can cause serious infections in the intestines or tissues of humans and animals, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. 'The alleged smuggling of biological materials by this alien from a science and technology university in Wuhan, China – to be used at a University of Michigan laboratory – is part of an alarming pattern that threatens our security,' interim US Attorney Jerome Gorgon said in a statement. Denis Simon, a non-resident fellow at Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, a Washington-based think tank, said Han's motives could have been anything from 'academic misjudgment' that was benign from a national security standpoint to possibly more suspicious conduct. For instance, Chinese scholars may fear that importing samples openly could lead to extra scrutiny, visa delays, or project cancellation, especially amid heightened US-China tensions. 'It is not uncommon for early-career scientists from abroad to underestimate US compliance and biosafety protocols, particularly if oversight in their home country is lax or ambiguous,' said Simon, who is also a visiting professor at Duke University's Asian Pacific Studies Institute. Han's case highlights the complex intersection of science, national security, and geopolitics, he said. 'This case may ultimately serve as a test case for how the US handles gray-zone academic violations in a period of heightened scrutiny of Chinese scholars,' he said. 'It also raises urgent questions about the future of international scientific mobility, research compliance training, and institutional due diligence at US universities,' he added. Han's arrest came a day after China's consulate in Chicago said in an official statement that it was seeking information about last week's case against Jian and Liu and had lodged a 'stern representation' with the US side. The two Chinese nationals were accused of attempting to smuggle the fungus pathogen Fusarium graminearum into the country last year. The diplomatic mission condemned the earlier case as 'political manipulation' by the US and its 'overstretched concept of national security'. - SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST


The Star
2 days ago
- The Star
Shubhanshu Shukla, first Indian in space in 41 Years, wll blast off in a Musk rocket
Shubhanshu Shukla (left) and specialist Slawosz Uznanski of Poland reviewing a procedure checklist card during training at Nasa's Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas on Sept 6, 2024. - AFP NEW DELHI: More than four decades after the first person from India went to space, the nation is finally about to have a sequel. Shubhanshu Shukla, an Indian Air Force test pilot, will be one of four astronauts aboard a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft on a flight scheduled to launch on Wednesday (June 11) from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The mission will be operated by Texas-based startup Axiom Space and will have a multinational crew that will also include Commander Peggy Whitson of the US, Mission Specialist Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of Poland and Mission Specialist Tibor Kapu of Hungary. They will spend as many as 14 days at the International Space Station. No Indian has been in orbit since Rakesh Sharma, who flew on a Soviet rocket in 1984, and the return to space has created a flurry of excitement in the South Asian nation. In Mr Shubhanshu Shukla's hometown of Lucknow, posters wishing the Indian Air Force test pilot him luck dot the city. - AFP In Shukla's hometown of Lucknow, about 560km (348 miles) east of New Delhi, posters wishing him luck dot the city and passersby stop and click selfies with his cut-outs. Local media reported how Israeli astronaut Eytan Stibbe, part of a 2022 Axiom mission to the ISS, met Shukla's family last month and addressed their anxieties. Shukla's flight will be the opening act for Narendra Modi's space ambitions in the coming years as his government tries to narrow the gap with nations such as China, which operates its own space station and has plans for a crewed lunar mission by 2030. India landed a robotic spacecraft near the moon's south pole in 2023, and the state-run Indian Space Research Organisation aims to launch Shukla and three other Indian astronauts on one of the agency's own rockets in 2027 for India's first crewed space mission. Other plans include Nisar, a joint US-India Earth-observation mission that Nasa and Isro are targeting to launch this month from the Indian agency's space center in Sriharikota, near Chennai. Isro also wants to create an Indian space station by 2035 and put an Indian astronaut on the moon by 2040. India's decision to deepen its space exploration efforts has won support from the global space community. Last month, the European Space Agency signed a statement of intent to cooperate with Isro on space exploration and a delegation from Japan's space agency went to Isro headquarters to discuss plans for a lunar mission. "It is India's time now,' said Sudheer Kumar N, former director at Isro's Capacity Building Program Office and an adviser on space projects. India can benefit from the country's ability to complete missions at a competitive cost and Modi's policy to encourage private-sector investment in the industry, he said. India's return to space was briefly threatened last week by the crossfire between the US President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk after Musk said in a social media post that he was going to decommission SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft that's supposed to carry Shukla and others to the ISS. This was after Trump spoke of cancelling Musk's government subsidies and contracts. Hours later, Musk clarified Dragon will not be decommissioned. Shukla's mission could provide important input for the Gaganyaan programme, Isro's human spaceflight initiative. For instance, as part of a joint project between Isero and Nasa, he will take fenugreek seeds and mung beans to germinate in space. Investigating space's impact on the plants could help future missions produce food, according to Nasa. "The feedback, learnings from this trip will be used in fine tuning and planning the Gaganyaan mission,' said Kumar. - Bloomberg


The Star
2 days ago
- The Star
Recognised for work on elephants
Nurzhafarina showing the skeleton of an elephant that died in Kinabatangan, now on display at UMS Tropical Biology and Conservation Institute gallery in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. — Bernama FOR over two decades, Dr Nurzhafarina Othman's life has been inextricably linked with the Bornean elephant, particularly in Sabah's Lower Kinabatangan. What began in 2003 as a conservation biology degree at Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS) evolved into a profound mission to understand and conserve South-East Asia's largest land mammal. Now a senior lecturer at UMS Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation, Nurzhafarina dedicates her life to studying every aspect of these gentle giants, whose future faces increasing threats. Her unwavering commitment to elephant conservation, especially through her leadership as founder and director of non-profit Seratu Aatai, recently garnered global recognition. In April, Nurzhafarina was honoured with the prestigious Whitley Award, widely known as the 'Green Oscar', as testament to her impactful work. Speaking to Bernama, she shared the unique and powerful bond that formed between her and the elephants during her fieldwork. These encounters revealed their sensitive, affectionate and intelligent nature, challenging common misconceptions. 'There's a feeling that we chose each other. It's as if I was meant to be part of their story,' she mused, recalling how her initial academic pursuit transformed into a deeper calling. Nurzhafarina recounts never experiencing aggression from the pachyderms. Instead, her presence was met with calm, as if they recognised her role as a protector, not an intruder. 'The elephants gave me their time,' she said, detailing how she came to know 50 individual females by sight, even naming them, over four years. The Sabah-based lecturer from Kedah emphasised that elephants don't 'attack' or 'invade'; rather, humans have encroached into their territories. This fundamental truth fuels her lifelong mission: to foster harmonious coexistence between humans and elephants. Founded in 2018, Seratu Aatai, which means 'united in heart' in the Sungai language, actively works with local communities through education and outreach. It aims to promote empathy and awareness for elephants and all wildlife. Seratu Aatai remains the only conservation group in Sabah solely dedicated to protecting the Bornean elephant (Elephas maximus borneensis) in Lower Kinabatangan, a rich biodiverse region also home to the orang utan, sun bear and proboscis monkey. Witnessing the elephants' struggle to navigate their fragmented natural habitats surrounded by human activity was a pivotal moment for her. It ignited her resolve to be a voice for these creatures, bridging the gap between human development and animal preservation. Receiving the Whitley Award 2025 was an emotional experience. Presented by the UK-based Whitley Fund for Nature (WFN), the award is highly competitive and globally recognised. On April 30, she accepted the £50,000 (RM287,000) award from WFN patron Princess Anne at the Royal Geographical Society in London, England. This award validates her efforts to protect the estimated 300 remaining Bornean elephants in eastern Sabah. It also acknowledges her innovative approach of engaging the palm oil industry in Lower Kinabatangan to adopt elephant- friendly practices and establish safe corridors for the world's smallest elephant species. 'This award comes with great responsibility,' said Nurzhafarina expressing gratitude for the platform it provided to highlight the elephants' plight and affirm the work of those in the field. For her, conservation is a heartfelt expression of gratitude for the opportunity to protect these endangered species. While acknowledging the challenges of uniting all parties, she hopes local communities will join her in this mission, believing Kinabatangan can symbolise human-wildlife harmony. 'Sabah and Borneo are renowned for their natural wealth. So we must find a balance between development and environmental conservation,' she added.