logo
Claps, cheers & countdown—students witness Axiom-4 liftoff from Bengaluru's Nehru Planetarium

Claps, cheers & countdown—students witness Axiom-4 liftoff from Bengaluru's Nehru Planetarium

The Print25-06-2025
From the live stream, the screen briefly changed to an earlier recorded version of astronauts collecting their boarding passes.
As the students curiously watched the screening, the room witnessed another batch of schoolchildren, much younger than the previous group, stream in. In a matter of minutes, the empty seats in the auditorium filled with kids from BBMP School in the city. Some students scrambled to get the right seat to grab the perfect visuals.
Bengaluru: Around 20 minutes past 11 this morning, a group of school students walked into the Vishveshwara Auditorium in Jawaharlal Nehru Planetarium, Bangalore. In front of them played on a giant screen the livestream of Axiom-4 astronauts seated inside the spaceflight, ready for a historic liftoff.
About 20 minutes into the stream, the volume level was tuned down as JNP director B.R. Guruprasad walked on the stage to give a running commentary in English and Kannada. About 20 minutes were left for Indian Air Force Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla and his team of Axiom-4 mission astronauts to lift off from Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center.
In the front row seats of the auditorium, a much older crowd was seated including officials from the planetarium.
'Enjoying the video?' asked Guruprasad. The crowd responded with a joyful yes followed by claps. The Axiom-4 mission's launch faced multiple delays and postponements, and the audience was finally happy to see the launch.
Eight minutes before the lift-off, Guruprasad gives a live commentary on the long awaited favourable weather conditions. The screen soon goes into a close-up of the launch vehicle, with white thick smoke around it.
'Only three minutes left,' said Guruprasad. As a former scientist at Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), Guruprasad explained to the students that delays happen in such cases. But now he was super confident the launch will go as planned.
The countdown
As the countdown came to final moment, the students joined in with a collective '10, 9, 8, 7…'.
At 12:01 pm Indian Standard Time (IST), the Falcon 9 rocket lifted off with a full thrust on the ground. The students cheered in delight. Another huge round of claps was let out when the first booster separation happened and the flight proceeded to the second stage.
'There was no problem. We are happy that we could live stream the launch,' said Guruprasad.
Four minutes into the flight, the rocket had travelled almost 200 kilometers, moving at a speed of 8,000 kilometers per hour and successfully passing the first stage. 'In our country, we should make space travel accessible,' Guruprasad added.
Raj N., who was among the audience at the auditorium, said, 'When I was 11 years old in 1984, we saw Rakesh Sharma go to space. I still remember even the logo of that launch—a chariot going to the sun.'
Interestingly, he is at the screening with his 11-year-old son Dhruva. 'It's not just about the rocket launch. There are scientists who built the rocket and also people who are monitoring the rocket all the time,' Dhruva said, his excitement palpable on watching the screening.
Santha, a woman in her late 60s, also joined the screening, eagerly seated in the front row with curiosity in her eyes. 'This is my first time attending such event.'
(Edited by Ajeet Tiwari)
Also Read: Axiom-4: IISc mentor roots for Shubhanshu Shukla. Tells him, 'Come back safe, thesis still pending'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Computer science research papers show fastest uptake of AI use in writing, analysis finds
Computer science research papers show fastest uptake of AI use in writing, analysis finds

Time of India

time2 hours ago

  • Time of India

Computer science research papers show fastest uptake of AI use in writing, analysis finds

Academy Empower your mind, elevate your skills Researchers analysed the use of large language models in over a million pre-print and published scientific papers between 2020 and 2024, and found the largest, fastest growth in use of the AI systems in computer science papers -- of up to 22 %.Powered by artificial intelligence (AI), large language models are trained on vast amounts of text and can therefore respond to human requests in the natural from Stanford University and other institutes in the US looked at 1,121,912 pre-print papers in the archives 'arXiv' and 'bioRxiv', and published papers across Nature journals from January 2020 to September on how often words commonly used by AI systems appeared in the papers, the team estimated the involvement of a large language model -- ChatGPT in this study -- in modifying content in a research published in the journal Nature Human Behaviour "suggest a steady increase in LLM (large language model) usage, with the largest and fastest growth estimated for computer science papers (up to 22%)."The researchers also estimated a greater reliance on AI systems among pre-print papers in the archive 'bioRxiv' written by authors from regions known to have a lower number of English-language speakers, such as China and continental papers related to mathematics and those published across Nature journals showed a lower evidence of use of AI in modifying content, according to the study team said that shorter papers and authors posting pre-prints more often showed a higher rate of AI use in writing papers, suggesting that researchers trying to produce a higher quantity of writing are more likely to rely on LLMs."These results may be an indicator of the competitive nature of certain research areas and the pressure to publish quickly," the team researchers also looked at a smaller number of papers to understand how scholars disclose use of AI in their inspection of randomly selected 200 computer science papers that were uploaded to the pre-print archive 'arXiv' in February 2024 revealed that "only two out of the 200 papers explicitly disclosed the use of LLMs during paper writing".Future studies looking at disclosure statements might help to understand researchers' motivation for using AI in writing example, policies around disclosing LLM usage in academic writing may still be unclear, or scholars may have other motivations for intentionally avoiding to disclose use of AI, the authors said.A recent study, published in the journal Science, estimated that at least 13% of research abstracts published in 2024 could have taken help from a large language model, as they included more of 'style' words seen to be favoured by these AI from the University of Tubingen, Germany, who analysed more than 15 million biomedical papers published from 2010 to 2024, said that AI models have caused a drastic shift in the vocabulary used in academic writing.

Dhruva Space to deploy two Australian payloads using its home-built satellite platform
Dhruva Space to deploy two Australian payloads using its home-built satellite platform

Hindustan Times

time6 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Dhruva Space to deploy two Australian payloads using its home-built satellite platform

Space start-up Dhruva Space is set to launch its first commercial mission, LEAP-1, by deploying payloads for two Australia-based firms using its indigenously developed satellite platform. The Dhruva Space's LEAP-1 mission satellite was developed on the P-30 satellite platform. ( The Hyderabad-based start-up will launch payloads from Australia's Akula Tech and Esper satellites aboard its P-30 satellite platform on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in Q3 of the current fiscal. AI payload Nexus-01 (Akula Tech) and hyperspectral imager OTR-2 (Esper) will fly on Dhruva's P-30 platform, which was successfully tested on ISRO's POEM-3 mission in January 2024. The LEAP-1 mission is officially slated to launch aboard SpaceX's Falcon 9 in Q3 2025, marking not just a significant Indo-Australian collaboration, but also growing support from the United States in Dhruva Space's global commercial journey, the company said. "Following a successful qualification of the P-30 onboard ISRO's PSLV-C58, Dhruva Space is excited to take its indigenously developed P-30 satellite platform to the global market," said Sanjay Nekkanti, CEO and co-founder of Dhruva Space. Dhruva Space's hosted payload offering LEAP (Launching Expeditions for Aspiring Payloads) integrates Ground Station-as-a-Service (GSaaS) and its proprietary Integrated Space Operations and Command Suite (ISOCS) for real-time mission management and payload data downlinking.

Dhruva Space to deploy two payloads using its home-built satellite platform
Dhruva Space to deploy two payloads using its home-built satellite platform

Business Standard

time7 hours ago

  • Business Standard

Dhruva Space to deploy two payloads using its home-built satellite platform

Space start-up Dhruva Space is set to launch its first commercial mission, LEAP-1, by deploying payloads for two Australia-based firms using its indigenously developed satellite platform. The Hyderabad-based start-up will launch payloads from Australia's Akula Tech and Esper satellites aboard its P-30 satellite platform on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in Q3 of the current fiscal. AI payload Nexus-01 (Akula Tech) and hyperspectral imager OTR-2 (Esper) will fly on Dhruva's P-30 platform, which was successfully tested on ISRO's POEM-3 mission in January 2024. The LEAP-1 mission is officially slated to launch aboard SpaceX's Falcon 9 in Q3 2025, marking not just a significant Indo-Australian collaboration, but also growing support from the United States in Dhruva Space's global commercial journey, the company said. "Following a successful qualification of the P-30 onboard ISRO's PSLV-C58, Dhruva Space is excited to take its indigenously developed P-30 satellite platform to the global market," said Sanjay Nekkanti, CEO and co-founder of Dhruva Space. Dhruva Space's hosted payload offering LEAP (Launching Expeditions for Aspiring Payloads) integrates Ground Station-as-a-Service (GSaaS) and its proprietary Integrated Space Operations and Command Suite (ISOCS) for real-time mission management and payload data downlinking. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store