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India’s roadmap in solar and space physics

Context

  • Indian astronomers recently published an overview of current solar and space physics in the Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy.
  • The paper highlights key challenges in solar research and India’s roadmap for the next decade, including ground- and space-based initiatives.
  • India’s Aditya-L1 mission and upcoming facilities like the National Large Solar Telescope are central to this effort.
  • Emphasis on developing prediction models for solar flares and CMEs to protect space assets and terrestrial infrastructure.

Relevance:

  • GS-3 (Science & Technology): Space research, solar physics, CME prediction, technological self-reliance.
  • GS-3 (Infrastructure & National Security): Protection of satellites, communication, power grids, and defense assets.

Basics of Solar Phenomena

Term Definition Key Fact
Solar Flare Sudden massive explosion on sun; energy release from twisted magnetic fields Emits across radio, X-ray, gamma rays
Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) Large plasma discharge from sun’s corona Can disrupt satellites, power grids
Solar Wind Continuous outflow of charged particles from corona Interacts with Earth’s magnetosphere
Coronal Loops Plasma constrained along magnetic field lines Visible in solar imaging, indicate magnetic activity

Importance: Space weather affects satellites, communication, navigation, astronauts, and power grids. Understanding these phenomena is critical for technological and national security.

Indian Initiatives

Space-Based Observatories

  • Aditya-L1 (ISRO, Sep 2023):
    • Positioned at Lagrange Point 1 (L1), 1.5 million km from Earth.
    • L1: Sun–Earth line; detects CMEs moving toward Earth.
    • High-resolution imaging & spectra of solar atmosphere.
  • Proposed expansion: spacecraft at L4 and L5 points for triangulated 3D tracking of solar eruptions.
    • L4: 60° ahead, L5: 60° behind Earth in orbit.
    • Challenge: Data transmission over 30 million km.

Significance: Dual/multiple spacecraft network allows accurate prediction of CME trajectories and improved space weather forecasting.

Ground-Based Facilities

  • National Large Solar Telescope (2-meter class):
    • To observe lower solar atmosphere at high resolution.
    • Cannot be deployed in space due to size.
  • Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA) and other institutions lead these efforts.

Human Resource and Community Development

  • 229 early-career Indian researchers involved globally; 65 faculty/scientists in India.
  • Initiatives: ISRO + ARIES workshops for students and researchers.
  • Goals:
    • Train young talent in data analysis & simulation.
    • Develop national supercomputing facilities for computational astrophysics.
    • Expand academic programs, faculty, public engagement, and industry partnerships.

Technological and Strategic Significance

  • Private sector involvement encouraged in India’s space sector.
    • Satellites, rockets, space weather modeling.
    • Innovation in predictive models for solar storms.
  • Self-reliance (Aatmanirbhar Bharat) in understanding solar-terrestrial relationships.
  • National security and infrastructure protection: Accurate CME predictions can safeguard power grids, communication networks, and satellite-based defense assets.

Key Data & Figures

  • Lagrange Points in Sun-Earth System: 5 points (L1 to L5).
  • Aditya-L1 distance: 1.5 million km from Earth (L1).
  • L4 & L5 distance from Earth: ~30 million km.
  • Community involvement: 229 early-career researchers + 65 faculty.

Challenges in Solar Physics

  • Incomplete understanding of CME-solar wind interaction.
  • Poorly defined magnetic structures of CMEs → affects trajectory prediction.
  • Emergence of magnetic fields under sunspots → complicates solar flare prediction.
  • Data-heavy modeling requires supercomputing resources.

Future Vision (10–15 Years)

  • Development of state-of-the-art prediction models for solar flares and CME arrival times.
  • Expansion of triangulated space observatories (L1, L4, L5).
  • Strengthened ground-based solar research infrastructure.
  • Integration of private sector and industry partnerships.
  • Focus on training next-generation solar physicists and computational astrophysicists.

October 2025
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