Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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Rakesh
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Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

Post by Rakesh »

Please use this thread to track all developments on the Gaganyaan Mission.

Recent historic space achievements of Bharat;

1) Chandrayaan 3: viewtopic.php?t=7922

2) Aditya-L1: viewtopic.php?t=7930

3) Mangalyaan: viewtopic.php?t=6678
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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

Post by Rakesh »

Group Captain Prashanth Nair picked for Gaganyaan
https://news.rediff.com/commentary/2024 ... 3e9f29a6f6
26 February 2024

https://x.com/nssdatta/status/1762053243956613501?s=20 ---> Group Captain Prashanth Balakrishnan Nair, a Sukhoi fighter pilot, it is learnt, has been picked as commander for the Gaganyaan mission. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will make the announcement in Thiruvananthapuram on 27 February 2024.

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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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Nair, Prathap, Krishnan and Chauhan listed for Gaganyaan mission - ToI
Ever since 2018 when PM Modi announced Gaganyaan, India's first manned space mission, the names of the prospective astronauts have been a matter of suspense and secrecy. Now, TOI has them. Sources said the four astronauts-select - all either wing commanders or group captains - are Prashanth Nair, Angad Prathap, Ajit Krishnan and Chauhan (full name not immediately available).

All four, who have been training at the astronaut training facility in Bengaluru, will be at Isro's Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre in Thiruvananthapuram on Tuesday, where PM Modi will introduce them to the world. TOI was the first to report in July 2019 that all astronauts-select for Gaganyaan would be test pilots, given that it was India's first spaceflight mission. Due to their specialisations, test pilots are usually called upon to study all that can go wrong in something that hasn't been tried before.

From scores of test pilots who enrolled to become astronauts, 12 made it past the first level of selection completed in Sept 2019 in Bengaluru. The selection was done at the Institute of Aerospace Medicine (IAM), which comes under Indian Air Force (IAF). After multiple rounds of selection, IAM and Isro shortlisted the final four. By early 2020, Isro sent the four men to Russia for initial training, which after some delay induced by Covid-19, was completed in 2021.

Since then, the four have been undergoing training by multiple agencies, including the armed forces.
Isro has been working on equipping its Human Space Flight Centre (HSFC) with various simulators for the training. They continue with their regular flying with IAF to remain fit.
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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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Meet the 4 fighter pilots handpicked for Gaganyaan, India's first ever crewed mission to space
https://www.livefistdefence.com/meet-th ... e-mission/
27 Feb 2024

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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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https://x.com/nssdatta/status/1762369583749730504?s=20 ---> Indian Gaganyaan Vyomnauts Revealed.

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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

Post by Yogi_G »

Personally I was disappointed that there was no Nari Shakti but happy that as always merit and fitment comes in first in ISRO. Had goosebumps when I saw the above picture on the tv.
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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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https://x.com/alpha_defense/status/1762 ... 04830?s=20 ---> Brahmos Integration Team x Su-30MKI. Now Gaganauts.

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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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VIDEO: https://x.com/ISROSight/status/1762381665626976283?s=20 ---> Watch this video to see the training that the four astronaut designations from ISRO went through to get ready for the first crewed Gaganyaan mission!

VIDEO: https://x.com/delhidefence/status/17623 ... 97240?s=20 ---> Prime Minister Narendra Modi interacted with the astronaut-designates for the Gaganyaan Mission, during a visit to Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, at Thiruvananthapuram. Introducing Group Captain P Balakrishnan Nair, Group Captain Ajit Krishnan, Group Captain Angad Pratap and Wing Commander Shubhanshu Shukla.
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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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https://x.com/alpha_defense/status/1762 ... 44947?s=20 ---> Gaganyaan Poster. Courtesy: @Rethik_D

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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

Post by samsher »

Rakesh wrote: 27 Feb 2024 20:05 VIDEO: https://x.com/ISROSight/status/1762381665626976283?s=20 ---> Watch this video to see the training that the four astronaut designations from ISRO went through to get ready for the first crewed Gaganyaan mission!

VIDEO: https://x.com/delhidefence/status/17623 ... 97240?s=20 ---> Prime Minister Narendra Modi interacted with the astronaut-designates for the Gaganyaan Mission, during a visit to Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, at Thiruvananthapuram. Introducing Group Captain P Balakrishnan Nair, Group Captain Ajit Krishnan, Group Captain Angad Pratap and Wing Commander Shubhanshu Shukla.
Any visuals / images of the astronaut wings?
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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

Post by sanman »

PM Modi Reveals Astronauts For India's First Manned Space Mission Gaganyaan

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1lhYnqZVN4
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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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Rakesh wrote: 27 Feb 2024 19:27 Meet the 4 fighter pilots handpicked for Gaganyaan, India's first ever crewed mission to space
https://www.livefistdefence.com/meet-th ... e-mission/
27 Feb 2024
https://x.com/Rethik_D/status/1762809955646906693?s=20 ---> Indian Astronauts have cool call signs:
>Prashanth Nair: PAPA
>Shubhanshu Shukla: SHUK
>Angad Pratap: MAX
>Ajit Krishna: KRISH
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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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samsher wrote: 28 Feb 2024 00:04Any visuals / images of the astronaut wings?
Are you referring to this?

https://x.com/nssdatta/status/1762797814374125776?s=20 ---> Looks like a similar design. @adipmehta & @a47merch. Guys, you helped ISRO for the Gaganyaan G1 mission too?

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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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Rakesh wrote: 04 Mar 2024 20:15
samsher wrote: 28 Feb 2024 00:04Any visuals / images of the astronaut wings?
Are you referring to this?

https://x.com/nssdatta/status/1762797814374125776?s=20 ---> Looks like a similar design. @adipmehta & @a47merch. Guys, you helped ISRO for the Gaganyaan G1 mission too?
I think that may be the shoulder patch on the flight suit? I was referring to the astronaut/ gaganaut wings that PM modi pinned on them.

I found it here:

https://m.rediff.com/news/report/gagany ... 240227.htm
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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

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India unveils its first set of Gaganyaan astronauts - Jatan Mehta, The Space Review
After four years of secrecy, the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced on February 27 the first four astronauts selected to fly on the country’s initial set of human spaceflight missions mid-decade via ISRO’s ambitious Gaganyaan program. The selectees are all test pilots and Group Captains: Prashanth Nair, Angad Prathap, Ajit Krishnan, and Shubhanshu Shukla. They have received extensive training in India and Russia, and at least one of them will receive advanced training in the US at NASA facilities sometime this year. The announcement of Gaganyaan astronauts is a great time to review India’s progress in putting people in space.

But first, where are the women astronauts? When asked, ISRO says women aren’t in this astronaut batch because being a test pilot was a key requirement, and India had no female test pilots at the time of selection. Well, that might be true, but India does have the highest global percentage of female airline pilots. The fighter pilot number is increasing, too. More firmly, Susmita Mohanty convincingly argues in a piece for The Print how the arbitrary selection criteria doesn’t hold water when compared to initial female astronaut selections worldwide. I agree when Mohanty says: “We have missed a great opportunity as a nation. We could have created history.”

For the benefit of global readers, here’s a brief primer on Indians that have already been to space. Rakesh Sharma was the first Indian to visit Earth orbit, where he spent seven days in 1984 aboard the Soviet Salyut 7 space station. Kalpana Chawla, the first Indian woman in space, held a US citizenship when she flew in 1997 on the Space Shuttle Columbia, the same vehicle Chawla was aboard in 2003, too, but which was destroyed during atmospheric reentry, killing Chawla and her crewmates. Sunita Williams is an Indian-origin but US-born astronaut who is set to fly to the International Space Station again this year aboard the first crewed Starliner flight by Boeing as part of NASA’s Commercial Crew program.

With Gaganyaan, India aims to send its people to space using its own rockets, capsules, and associated technologies. The first crewed Gaganyaan flight will carry no more than two of the four aforementioned astronauts to a 400-kilometer low Earth orbit, where they will spend three days in the Crew Module. If successful, India will then be only the world’s fourth nation to indigenously send humans to space, after Russia, the US, and China. India hopes to clinch this Yuri Gagarin moment of its own by end of 2025, but delays are expected.

India’s crawls and leaps toward indigenous human spaceflight

For well over a decade, ISRO had been inching towards some baseline technologies necessary to even plan such a massive feat, despite roadblocks and delayed funding. The Indian government finally formally green-lit the human spaceflight program in 2018. Progress on technological components has been faster ever since, with 2022 featuring a successful integrated parachute test demonstrating safe capsule splashdown in the event one of the three main chutes failed to open. More parachute tests followed last year, including tests specific to drogue chutes.

In February 2023, ISRO began practicing sea recovery trials with a representative crew module, which simulates the mass, center of gravity, size, and externals of the actual Crew Module. In April 2023, ISRO completed human-rating the liquid-fueled Vikas engine after an extensive test period of three years, demonstrating higher structural margins, better health monitoring, off-nominal recoveries, and redundancy in many of its associated systems. Two Vikas engines power the core stage of the Launch Vehicle Mark III (LVM3), India’s most powerful rocket and the vehicle of choice for sending astronauts to space. Likewise in February 2024, ISRO completed human-rating LVM3’s CE-20 cryogenic upper stage engine after a comprehensive set of 39 engine tests.

In May 2023, ISRO qualified the Crew Module’s propulsion system, which will provide controlled atmospheric descent to complete each Gaganyaan flight and bring astronauts back home. In case of an abnormal launch, the same system will keep the crew module stable between a height of 3 to 70 kilometers. In July 2023, ISRO successfully tested the Service Module’s propulsion system (video), which features five 440-newton engines and 16 100-newton reaction control thrusters. During Gaganyaan missions, it’s the service module that will inject astronauts in the Crew Module into orbit, circularize it to a 400-kilometer altitude and maintain it, and eventually provide the deorbit maneuver for the crew module before separating from it.

ISRO then conducted a successful abort test in October 2023, which means the crew escape system can safely carry astronauts away from the launch vehicle in the case of an emergency. S. V. Krishna Chaitanya has reported that ISRO’s next step is to better test aspects of the crew module’s parachute system by dropping a representative module from an altitude of four kilometers using a heavy-lift helicopter. This will be followed by another abort test where the escape system will lift the module away while the rocket is on the launchpad itself to simulate pad emergencies. ISRO did conduct one such test in 2018 but this redo is necessary because there have been substantial design changes to Gaganyaan since.

Growing scope and international interest

As part of an unprecedented set of broad-sweeping India-US agreements in 2023 centered around collaborative science and technology advancements, NASA will carry one of the four aforementioned Indian astronauts to the International Space Station later this year. NASA and private US companies have also shown interest in leveraging parts of Gaganyaan’s technology stack for a post-ISS future. Chethan Kumar reported last year that Blue Origin and ISRO are interested in using LVM3 to launch crew capsules to service Blue Origin’s upcoming commercial space station, Orbital Reef. Voyager Space announced similar intentions last year for its upcoming Starlab commercial space station, for which it has partnered with Airbus.

The Indian government directed ISRO in October 2023 to create an Indian Space Station in Earth orbit by 2035, and even send the first Indian to the Moon by 2040. To realize these ambitions, the Indian Department of Space (DOS) and ISRO are developing a roadmap for crewed and lunar exploration, which will comprise an orbital module before the space station, a series of Chandrayaan missions, the development of a partially reusable Next Generation Launch Vehicle (NGLV), and more.

Despite India’s increasingly complex human spaceflight and planetary exploration ambitions for later this decade and early next, the fiscal year (FY) 2024–25 budget for its Department of Space (DOS)—which includes ISRO’s activities—improved only marginally from $1.51 billion last year to $1.58 billion; even if it may be the interim budget with the national election coming up.

Notably, DOS underutilized its space technology budget in FY 2023–24 by about $150 million, a trait the country’s Ministry of Science & Technology as a whole suffers from. As Mukunth points out in a post, this is but the latest example illustrating that increasing ISRO’s budget alone isn’t a solution in itself for continuing advances in space. Separately, as part of the broader national budget announcement, India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced the availability of $12 billion dollars in interest-free loans over 50 years for Indian tech startups, including space ones, to tap into.
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Re: Gaganyaan Mission: Launch and Discussion

Post by sanman »

Sun, Moon & Beyond: ISRO Chief Spells Out Details On India’s Current & Future Plans

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X5DLYbWAIDw
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