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Axiom-4 and Shubhanshu Shukla's experience will provide critical inputs to India's space missions

Axiom-4 and Shubhanshu Shukla's experience will provide critical inputs to India's space missions

Indian Express4 hours ago

On Wednesday, Space X's Falcon 9 rocket propelled India's Shubhanshu Shukla and three other astronauts from Hungary, Poland and the US towards the International Space Station (ISS). Shukla, the pilot for the Houston-based Axiom Space-chartered mission, is the second Indian to travel to space after Rakesh Sharma in 1984. But if Sharma's voyage on a Soviet spacecraft had a largely symbolic — and inspirational — significance for a nation taking its early steps in space technology, Shukla's two-week-long stay at the ISS will serve several practical purposes. In the four decades between the two forays, India's premier space research agency, ISRO, has taken large strides. From an institution that initially focused on harnessing space technology for national development — agriculture, communication, water management and disaster response — ISRO is today making its mark in launching complex missions to Mars and the Moon. Forty years ago, India did not have the scientific acumen to do complete justice to the experiences gleaned during Sharma's spaceflight. Now, as its second space traveller makes his way to the ISS, the country is poised to launch its own crewed orbital mission — the Gaganyaan is slated to take off in the first half of 2027.
The task of sending humans into the vast unknown and bringing them back safely is more challenging than the Mars and Moon missions. At the same time, space missions today demand much more than piloting from their crew. They must be adept at performing complex scientific tasks, working well in teams, coordinating with experts on the ground and adjusting quickly to changing conditions. Shukla is one of the four astronauts shortlisted for Gaganyaan. His learnings during the Axiom mission will provide critical inputs to the country's first crewed space mission. The experiments, which the Axiom voyagers will conduct in fields as diverse as health, biofarming and waste remediation, tie in with ISRO's recent research objectives. Muscle atrophy, for instance. As underlined poignantly by recent images of Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore, spacefarers lose the ability to regenerate muscles during extended stays outside Earth. While this phenomenon has been extensively studied, the precise reasons for cells not repairing well in space are not clear. An ISRO-NASA collaboration during the Axiom mission will use stem cells to examine the muscle repair process. Microgravity mimics, in a much faster way, what ageing and disease do to muscles. That's why the Axiom studies — which Gaganyaan is slated to build on — hold salience beyond the spacefaring community. Shukla is also armed with an elaborate set of instructions from scientists at the Delhi-based International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, which will enable him to study how microgravity affects algae's carbon capture and oxygen production — these could provide the rudiments of building an algae-powered life-support system.
Launched in 1998, the ISS embodies the global community's collective desire for knowledge on space technology. India's second space voyager will have an opportunity to observe its functioning. Given that ISRO has plans for an Indian space station in the next 10 years, Shukla's experience could be critical to this endeavour. His stay in space could be a forerunner to many more feathers in ISRO's cap.

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Space travel alters world view… planet Earth belongs to everyone: Rakesh Sharma
Space travel alters world view… planet Earth belongs to everyone: Rakesh Sharma

The Print

time14 minutes ago

  • The Print

Space travel alters world view… planet Earth belongs to everyone: Rakesh Sharma

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‘Space travel alters worldview, Earth belongs to everyone,' says Rakesh Sharma as Shubhanshu Shukla's Axiom-4 mission makes history for India
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The Hindu

time14 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

‘Space travel alters worldview, Earth belongs to everyone,' says Rakesh Sharma as Shubhanshu Shukla's Axiom-4 mission makes history for India

Astronaut Rakesh Sharma, the first Indian to journey into space in 1984, said that space travel alters the mindset of humans, making them see the world from a perspective where "this planet belongs to everyone" and is not the sole preserve of anyone. He shared his thoughts in a recorded podcast shared by the Ministry of Defence on the day India returned to space after 41 years, as Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla from India and three other astronauts set forth on a landmark space odyssey on Wednesday (June 25, 2025). Mr. Sharma had spent eight days in orbit in the erstwhile Soviet Union's Salyut-7 space station in 1984. Mr. Shukla scripted history by embarking on a space travel mission, along with three others from the U.S., Poland, and Hungary, to the International Space Station as part of a commercial mission by Axiom Space. Sharma recollects historic flight In the podcast released Wednesday night, Mr. Sharma, who had famously said, 'Sare Jehan Se Acha...' during his time in the orbit, said he was a test pilot in the Indian Air Force when the selection happened. He later retired as wing commander from the IAF. "Because I was a test pilot when the selection happened.. that time, I was young, I was fit, and I had the qualification, so I was lucky enough to have been chosen. Then, after selection, we moved to Star City, just outside Moscow, for our training. Qualified cheer: The Hindu editorial on Shubhanshu Shukla, Axiom-4 mission "The training went on for 18 months, which culminated in the Indo-Soviet spaceflight in 1984. It was an eight-day mission, and we carried out experiments which were designed by Indian scientists," he said. Mr. Sharma recalled that the entire training and communication with crew members and mission control while they were in orbit was in Russian. "We had to learn the language before we started training, and that was not easy because of the paucity of time. So, we took about two months to learn the language," he said. Different era While the Indo-Soviet spaceflight took place in an analogue era when very few owned a television, the Axiom-4 mission lift-off was watched by people on TV screens and mobile phones live across the globe. After multiple delays, Elon Musk's SpaceX launch vehicle with Crew Dragon spacecraft atop a Falcon-9 rocket blasted off from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 12:01 pm (IST) carrying mission pilot Shukla, former NASA astronaut Commander Peggy Whitson and mission specialists Tibor Kapu of Hungary and Slawosz Uznanski-Wisniewski of Poland. "Kamaal ki ride thi (It was an amazing ride)," Mr. Shukla said 10 minutes after the Dragon spacecraft was placed in orbit around the Earth at an altitude of 200 km as part of the Axiom Mission 4(Ax-4). In the podcast, Mr. Sharma, when asked how he felt watching the world and India from space, exclaimed, "Oh dear! Beautiful." "In our country, we got everything: we got a long coastline, we got the ghats section, we got plains, we got tropical forests, we got mountains, Himalayas. It's a beautiful sight, different colours, different textures," he said. Mr. Sharma said in space, days and nights are very unusual, as sunrises and sunsets happen at an interval of just 45 minutes. Mental impact He said while space travel technology has changed, "as humans, we haven't changed much". "The mental impact will always be there because humans will be able to get a different perspective. It does kind of alter the world view... (shows) the vast place in universe," the veteran astronaut said. It changes the mindset, he emphasised. The IAF, in a post on X, said Mr. Shukla has set forth on a landmark space mission, carrying the pride of the nation beyond Earth. It also said, "This is a dèjà-vu moment for India, 41 years after the mission of Sqn Ldr Rakesh Sharma, who first carried our Tricolour beyond Earth. Being more than a mission - it is a reaffirmation of India's ever-expanding horizon." Future of space travel Asked about the future of Indian space travel, Mr. Sharma said, "We will be going farther and farther from planet Earth." "We really need to preserve what we have, which means we need to end conflicts, we need to forget about our planet belongs to everyone, it is not a sole preserve," he underlined. Mr. Sharma added that space exploration will "keep marching ahead". "I am hoping that India will be a modern leader in the years to come, and India will succeed in its (space) mission, which I am quite confident we will," he said. Mr. Sharma said after his return from the mission, he went back to the Indian Air Force. "And after few years, I moved to Hindustan Aeronautics Limited as their chief test pilot," he said, and recalled his association with the evolution of the Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) 'Tejas'.

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