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India shines at Glex 2025 summit, emerges as global space power

India shines at Glex 2025 summit, emerges as global space power

India Today09-05-2025

India demonstrated its rising status as a global space power as Dr. Jitendra Singh, Union Minister of State, Science and Technology, addressed the Global Space Exploration Conference (GLEX 2025) at Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi.The high-profile summit, themed 'Reaching New Worlds: A Space Exploration Renaissance,' drew leaders, astronauts, and scientists from over 35 countries, reinforcing India's central role in international space diplomacy and innovation.advertisementJointly organised by the International Astronautical Federation (IAF), Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), and the Astronautical Society of India (ASI), GLEX 2025 featured more than 240 interactive presentations across 10 technical sessions and 15 thematic areas, showcasing global advances in space exploration.
Dr. Singh inaugurated a dynamic exhibition with 22 stalls, highlighting achievements from Indian startups, international agencies, and ISRO's latest missions.In his keynote, Dr. Singh emphasised India's transformation from a follower to a global enabler in space.'India is now collaborating as an equal partner with leading space-faring nations. This is a testimony to our scientific capability, visionary leadership, and commitment to peaceful space cooperation,' he stated, noting that India's journey now inspires developing nations worldwide.He described GLEX 2025 as a platform advancing India's dual vision: serving its people through space applications and acting as a trusted global partner, not a 'Big Brother,' but as 'equal brothers' for the collective benefit of humanity.advertisementThe Minister highlighted government initiatives to democratise the space sector, with over 190 startups emerging in the past two years, fueling innovation in deep space missions and commercial applications. International dignitaries from ESA, Japan, the US, China, and the UAE attended, reflecting the event's global character.ISRO Chairman V. Narayanan reiterated the agency's commitment to interplanetary exploration and societal benefit. The summit also launched an astronaut outreach programme, featuring global and Indian astronauts engaging with youth to spark interest in space science.

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From chicken noodle soup to Indian fish curry, space menu gets upgrade as scientists spice up food for astronauts
From chicken noodle soup to Indian fish curry, space menu gets upgrade as scientists spice up food for astronauts

Time of India

time38 minutes ago

  • Time of India

From chicken noodle soup to Indian fish curry, space menu gets upgrade as scientists spice up food for astronauts

Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Additional spices and seasonings—cumin, sugar, cayenne pepper, cashews, turmeric, black pepper, coriander, and freeze-dried cilantro flakes— make up less than 1% of weight each, yet they are measured with precise, decimal-point accuracy. This meticulously crafted ingredients list for an Indian fish curry recipe isn't from the kitchens of celebrity one of the nearly five-dozen carefully engineered items on the menu developed for the astronauts of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). This culinary creation is documented by the US space agency in its technical paper from March the core of it is an Indian-origin American professor.'Early space missions focused mainly on safe and nutritional food. Palatability was never a priority,' says Suresh Pillai, professor, department of food science and technology, Texas A&M University (TAMU). Pillai heads the state-of-the-art food R&D laboratory that has been designing meals for NASA astronauts since 2005. Today, approximately 30% of the food sent to the International Space Station (ISS) is designed and developed by Pillai and his team at the university.'I can confidently say that Indian astronaut Shubhanshu Shukla will enjoy a far more palatable meal in space than Rakesh Sharma did over four decades ago,' says Pillai, though he clarifies that he's not privy to the exact menu planned for the upcoming Axiom Mission 4 (also called Ax-4) to the space station where Shukla is set to join as a the Commander's Cove bar in College Station, Texas, the nights come alive when a 63-year-old DJ—known to clubbers as Deep Spin Prof—takes control of the decks, unleashing a cocktail of electronic dance music, tech house, rap and as the sun rises, Deep Spin Prof morphs back into his other, more formal identity: Professor Suresh Pillai, a groundbreaking food in Golden Rock, Tamil Nadu, Pillai's roots trace back to Thrissur in Kerala, from where his parents hailed. With a bachelor's degree in botany and master's in industrial microbiology from Madras University, he ventured to US in 1986 to pursue a PhD in microbiology and immunology at the University of Arizona, 2005, Pillai has been at the forefront of developing safe and nutritious space cuisine. Between 2014 and 2018, he also lent his expertise to the US Food and Drug Administration's Science Advisory Board.'If you are paying so many dollars to be a space tourist, you wouldn't want to settle for just a pouch of food, would you?' asks Pillai. 'Can we develop the next generation of space meals—dishes that rival the finest first-class airline cuisine — while still prioritising safety and nutrition? After all, we have to make sure a space tourist doesn't end up with diarrhoea,' he the concept of space colonisation hitting a critical mass, it was only a matter of time the menu got an upgrade—chicken noodle soup, Indian fish curry, chocolate pudding and Pillai points out, now scientists have to think of not just seasoned astronauts but also future tourists and deep-space explorers bound for the Moon and Mars. Group Captain Shukla, an IAF fighter pilot deputed by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) for the Ax-4 mission — a private endeavour in collaboration with NASA — will become India's second astronaut to venture into space after Rakesh Sharma's historic 1984 flight. It is scheduled to launch on June 10 from the Kennedy Space Center in will be the first Indian astronaut to board the ISS, a football field-sized orbiting laboratory, has hosted over 260 astronauts from 21 countries since Expedition 1 docked on November 2, 2000, according to NASA's records as of May 2023. The station includes six sleeping quarters, two bathrooms, a gym and a 360-degree-view bay window for other three crew members of Ax-4 include Peggy Whitson, the American mission commander, Sławosz UznanskiWisniewski, a European Space Agency project astronaut from Poland, and Tibor Kapu from Hungary. The astronauts are slated to spend up to 14 days aboard the ISS, conducting a variety of scientific Indian, Prasanth Balakrishnan Nair, has been designated as a backup crew member for the to Pillai, about 80% of the food in the ISS comes from a standard NASA-prepared menu, while the remaining 20% is tailored to each astronaut's personal preferences. In a press interaction last month, DK Singh, director of ISRO's Human Space Flight Centre, noted that Shukla 'will get ghar ka khana (home food)' and also have the option to choose from international cuisine, as approved by has prepared an assortment of rice dishes, moong dal halwa and mango nectar, among other treats, to ensure that the astronaut can take the taste of India with him. The NASA-approved menu at the ISS offers a wide variety of vegetarian and non-vegetarian dishes. There are beef fajitas, grilled chicken, Indian fish curry and chicken with corn and black beans. There are also Italian green beans, brown rice, carrot coins, cheese tortellini with tomato sauce and curry sauce with dessert, astronauts can indulge in chocolate pudding, tropical fruit salad and cranapple delicacy. As for beverages, a fruit cocktail is among the options. NC Bhat, a former ISRO scientist who trained with NASA in 1985 for a space shuttle mission, fondly remembers selecting suji halwa as his preferred dish for the journey. 'We were taught how to sip tea and pour hot water in a zero-gravity environment,' he recalls with a chuckle over the Bhat and his colleague P Radhakrishnan were both shortlisted and trained for the flight, their dreams were dashed when NASA suspended its shuttle programme after the Challenger disaster in 1986, which claimed the lives of all seven astronauts on board.'At the Johnson Space Center in Houston, we learned the art of galley management, a skill still considered critical for astronauts,' Bhat galley — a modular unit comprising a water dispenser and an oven to heat precooked, thermostabilised meals—ensures that food stays in place rather than drift away mid-bite. Mastering galley management remains a very important part of astronaut training, ensuring that meal doesn't become a floating mess in a zero-gravity environment.'There's a lot to learn from traditional food cultures when designing sustainable and enjoyable meals for longduration space travel, especially to combat menu fatigue — a phenomenon where astronauts lose interest in repetitive meals, ' says Priyanka D Rajkakati, an Indian-origin French aerospace engineer who participated in a mock Moon mission on a Hawaiian island. Her 15-day confinement in 2020 was part of research efforts geared toward the human exploration of the Moon and, eventually, Mars. She recalls how the six-member crew, including three women, focused on various investigations that contributed to a deeper understanding of human adaptation and operational strategies for future space expeditions.'We quickly realised how crucial the interplay between food and daily rhythms was in the confined environment of the mission,' she explains, noting that the quality of meals significantly affected everyone's mood, health, energy and overall recalls how the crew discovered about halfway through the mission that powdered onion wasn't the best choice.'It might even have been making us sick, so we gave it a red code: NONIONS,' she space food researchers are grappling with a dual challenge: crafting gourmetquality meals for short-term space tourists while simultaneously developing foods that can endure the five-year shelf life needed for deep-space missions to Gaganyaan project envisions sending a crew of three astronauts into a lowEarth orbit of 400 km for a three-day mission, before safely splashing down in Indian waters. Even short-term missions like these face significant challenges, such as limited water and the difficulties of preparing meals in a zero-gravity the ISS, astronauts often spend months at a time in orbit, but they have never had to go hungry, thanks to regular resupply missions that deliver both packaged and fresh foods. Fresh fruits and vegetables, for instance, are typically enjoyed in the first few days after arrival. But the challenge of developing a food system for a Mars mission is far more complex.A single journey from Earth to Mars is expected to take seven to 10 months, making the round trip one and half years in transit alone. Factoring in an estimated 18-month stay on the Red Planet — and additional months or years for unforeseen delays — astronauts could require food provisions for about five the ISS, resupply missions to Mars won't be easy. What's more, adding refrigerators would significantly increase the spacecraft's mass, volume and power to NASA's current plans, the first woman will set foot on the Moon this decade, paving the way for humans to venture to Mars in the following says he's constantly consumed by a single challenge: how to develop space food that's safe, nutritious and palatable — no matter how many years it needs to last.'I am focusing on electron beam technology – eBeam —because that's the key to sterilising future space foods,' he says, adding that several of his PhD students are now diving deep into this research.

QuBeats wins Defence Ministry's iDEX ADITI 2.0 grant of Rs 25 crore to build Quantum Navigation Systems for Indian Navy
QuBeats wins Defence Ministry's iDEX ADITI 2.0 grant of Rs 25 crore to build Quantum Navigation Systems for Indian Navy

India Gazette

timean hour ago

  • India Gazette

QuBeats wins Defence Ministry's iDEX ADITI 2.0 grant of Rs 25 crore to build Quantum Navigation Systems for Indian Navy

New Delhi [India], June 7 (ANI): Indian quantum deeptech startup QuBeats has won the prestigious ADITI 2.0 Defence Challenge to develop an indigenous Quantum Positioning System (QPS) for the Indian Navy. The award, which comes with a grant of Rs 25 crore (USD 3 million), will enable QuBeats to build next-generation high-precision quantum sensors that promise accurate navigation in GPS-denied or spoofed environments - a critical capability for modern military operations. QuBeats said in a release that it is disrupting conventional paradigms with its innovative quantum magnetometer technology in an era heavily dependent on satellite-based navigation like GPS. 'These high-precision sensors detect the Earth's unique magnetic anomaly signatures, enabling navigation that is entirely independent of GPS systems--reliable by day or night, in any condition. This groundbreaking capability offers transformative benefits across both military and civilian domains, addressing a potential market of USD 10 billion. The startup is currently raising a seed round to accelerate its product research roadmap,' the release said. 'As one of the few quantum sensing companies of its kind in India, QuBeats is redefining the country's strategic technological edge,' it said. The release said the company has been founded by a stellar team of physicists, engineers, and defence technologists and is building a suite of quantum products that include Quantum Magnetometers, Quantum Gyroscopes, Miniature Atomic Clocks, Rydberg Radars, and highly sensitive target detection sensors for critical and strategic use cases. 'Winning the ADITI 2.0 Challenge is not just a validation of our unique technology approach, but a clarion call to India's quantum aspirations. QuBeats is here to build the future--and build it from India,' said the founders in a joint statement. The release said QuBeats is uniquely positioned with a first-mover advantage in India in an age where navigation sovereignty and sensor dominance define military superiority,. With foundational IP in quantum sensing, a strong R&D pipeline, and a global outlook, QuBeats aims to productize quantum sensing solutions for defence, aerospace, energy, and critical infrastructure. The founding team includes Mallikarjun Karra - a PhD candidate at Max Planck Society, Madhu Talluri -postdoc from Lawrence Berkeley Lab, Shouvik Mukherjee - a finishing postdoc at Joint Quantum Institute at Univ of Maryland, US and Rajat Sethi - a graduate of MIT, Harvard and IIT Kharagpur. The release said China and the United States are investing billions in quantum navigation and sensing. China's PLA has integrated quantum magnetometers for stealth submarine detection, while the US is advancing chip-scale quantum clocks and gravity sensors for battlefield resilience. It said QuBeats provides India a vital response to these developments. 'By creating indigenous, battle-ready, and globally competitive quantum systems, QuBeats is India's answer to strategic parity in quantum warfare,' the release said. QuBeats said it proud to lead India's charge 'with vision, innovation, and the indomitable spirit of first principles' as quantum becomes the new high ground in defence and aerospace. (ANI)

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