Gaganyaan Mission — India Goes to Space 🚀
Complete UPSC Notes — crew selection, mission phases, technologies (HLVM3, Crew Escape, Life Support), Vyommitra, Axiom-4 & Shubhanshu Shukla in space (June 2025), mission MITRA, all 2024–2026 current affairs. G1 launch: H2 2026. Crewed H1: 2027.
🔥 Quick Revision — The Whole Story
📅 Mission Phases — What Has Happened & What's Next
Crew Escape Test
Shukla at ISS
Parachute Drop Test
with Vyommitra
Uncrewed flights
Crewed Mission!
👨✈️ The Four Gaganyatris — India's Astronaut Corps
⚙️ Key Technologies — HLVM3, Crew Module, Life Support
🚀 HLVM3 — Human-Rated LVM3
Modified LVM3 with enhanced reliability — 3 propulsive stages: S200 solid boosters + L110 liquid stage (Vikas engines) + C32 cryogenic stage (CE-20, human-rated Feb 2024). 10% more thrust in each stage. Crew Escape System (CES) integrated at the top.
🏠 Crew Module (CM)
Pressurized habitable space with Earth-like environment — N₂+O₂ atmosphere at sea-level pressure. Double-walled: pressurized metallic inner structure + unpressurized outer structure with Thermal Protection System (TPS). Houses life support, navigation, crew interfaces, deceleration systems.
⚙️ Service Module (SM)
Unpressurized structure providing propulsion, thermal control, power (solar panels), avionics, and deployment mechanisms. Surrounds the CM in orbit. Jettisoned before re-entry — only CM returns to Earth.
🆘 Crew Escape System (CES)
Abort system that can pull the crew module away from the rocket in <1 second during a launch emergency. TV-D1 (Oct 21, 2023) successfully tested CES — India demonstrated that crew can escape mid-flight safely. Multiple more abort tests planned.
🌬️ Life Support System (ECLSS)
Environmental Control and Life Support System — maintains cabin pressure (like sea level), temperature (18–27°C), humidity, CO₂ removal, and O₂ generation. Key challenge: all this for 3–7 days in a sealed small capsule. Engineering model of ECLSS tested in G1.
🪂 Parachute Recovery System
10-parachute cascade system: apex cover parachutes → two drogue chutes (stabilize + slow) → three pilot chutes → three main parachutes. IADT-01 (Aug 24, 2025) — 4.8-tonne dummy capsule dropped from 3 km by IAF Chinook, recovered by INS Anvesh. Rail-track sled tests at TBRL, Chandigarh (Dec 2025, Feb 2026).
🤖 Vyommitra — India's Robot Astronaut
- Half-humanoid robot
- Simulates crew functions
- Monitors Life Support
- Issues alerts
- Voice-command capable
- Detects SOS signals
- Flies in G1 (uncrewed)
Vyommitra (from Sanskrit: Vyoma = space + Mitra = friend) is ISRO's half-humanoid robot astronaut — the "pilot" for Gaganyaan's uncrewed G1 mission. It has a human-like upper body with a face designed to mimic human expressions, voice recognition, and two-way communication.
Its key functions: monitoring cabin pressure, temperature, and life support parameters during G1; operating panel switches and controls; issuing alerts if conditions deviate from normal; responding to ground control instructions; and providing real-time data on how the spacecraft performs in actual space conditions before humans board.
🌟 Axiom-4 Mission — Shubhanshu Shukla at the ISS
🛸 Axiom Mission 4 (Ax-4) — June 25 to July 15, 2025
Gaganyatri Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla became the second Indian to go to space (after Rakesh Sharma in 1984) and the first Indian at the International Space Station. Launched on SpaceX Falcon 9 / Crew Dragon "Grace" from Kennedy Space Center, Florida. 18 days aboard the ISS with Commander Peggy Whitson (USA), Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski (Poland/ESA), and Tibor Kapu (Hungary). Returned safely to Pacific Ocean off San Diego on July 15, 2025.
| Aspect | Detail | UPSC Significance |
|---|---|---|
| India's Experiments | 7 Indian science experiments completed — muscle repair, algae growth (cyanobacteria for O₂), seed behaviour in microgravity, tardigrades (water bears), neurological responses, cognitive effects of screen use, microbial adaptation | Microgravity research, Gaganyaan preparation, space biology |
| 60 Total Experiments | From 31 countries — most by Axiom Space on a single mission. Cancer cell growth, crop seed development, heart muscle cells, DNA repair in cosmic rays | International cooperation, ISS as global scientific lab |
| Cost | ~₹600 crore — including training for 2 astronauts (Shukla + backup Prasanth Nair) | Investment in human spaceflight capability |
| Gaganyaan Benefit | First-hand experience of microgravity, space station operations, crew-ground communication, ISRO teams trained alongside NASA/Axiom controllers | Directly prepares India for G1/H1 missions |
| Historic Significance | 2nd Indian in space (after Rakesh Sharma, 1984). 1st Indian on ISS. Ashoka Chakra awarded (Republic Day 2026) | 41-year gap in Indian human spaceflight ended |
| Agreement Context | India-USA ISRO-NASA agreement signed during PM Modi's US visit — allows one Indian astronaut per US mission to ISS | India-US space cooperation, Artemis Accords India signatory |
🆕 All Key Developments
Feb 27 2024Four Gaganyatris Revealed — PM Modi
PM Narendra Modi officially introduced India's four astronaut-designates at VSSC, Thiruvananthapuram: Group Captain Prasanth Balakrishnan Nair, Ajit Krishnan, Angad Pratap, and Wing Commander Shubhanshu Shukla (later promoted to Group Captain 2024). All IAF test pilots. Trained at Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Centre, Russia (2020) and ISRO's Astronaut Training Facility, Bengaluru.
Jun–Jul 2025Axiom-4: Shukla at ISS — India Returns to Space 🌟
Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla flew on Axiom Mission 4 (June 25–July 15, 2025). First Indian at the ISS; second Indian in space (after 41 years). Conducted 7 Indian experiments. ~₹600 crore cost. PM Modi held live interaction from ISS. Shukla awarded Ashoka Chakra on Republic Day 2026 — India's highest peacetime gallantry award.
Feb 2024CE-20 Human-Rated — Gaganyaan Cryo Engine Cleared
ISRO completed human rating of CE-20 cryogenic engine for the HLVM3 on February 13, 2024. Cleared 39 hot-fire tests. Engine cleared for human spaceflight — a critical prerequisite for G1. The C32 cryogenic stage will power HLVM3 with a modified CE-20 engine.
Dec 18 2024HLVM3 Assembly Begins at Sriharikota
ISRO commenced assembly of Human-Rated LVM3 for the G1 mission at Satish Dhawan Space Centre on December 18, 2024. Crew Module Propulsion System integrated in January 2025. Set of 10 parachutes shipped in May 2025. Vehicle and HLVM3 fully integrated by mid-December 2025.
Aug 24 2025IADT-01 — First Integrated Air Drop Test
ISRO successfully conducted IADT-01 — a 4.8-tonne dummy crew capsule lifted by IAF Chinook helicopter to 3 km, released, main parachutes opened in sequence, and capsule successfully recovered by INS Anvesh at Chennai port. Validates the parachute recovery system that will bring real astronauts home.
Dec 2025Rail Sled Tests — Parachute Disreefing
ISRO and DRDO conducted rail track rocket sled tests at TBRL, Chandigarh (December 18–19, 2025 and February 19, 2026) — validating modifications in the Disreefing systems. Sleds launched at over 600 km/h to simulate capsule re-entry dynamics. Final qualification level load tests passed with extra design safety margin.
Dec 6 2024Well Deck Trials — Navy Recovery Exercises
ISRO and Indian Navy Eastern Naval Command completed well deck trials aboard INS Jalashwa. A mass-and-shape simulated crew module was floated into the ship's well deck, towed, docked, and secured — validating the full sequence of crew module recovery operations under both nominal and off-nominal conditions.
Apr 2026Mission MITRA Begins — Ladakh Wilderness
ISRO launched Mission MITRA (April 2026) in Leh, Ladakh — testing the four Gaganyatris for mental, physical, and crew operability strengths in the extreme wilderness environment. An analogue mission simulating isolation and stress conditions of spaceflight — preparing crew psychologically and physically for actual G1/H1 missions.
🧬 Microgravity Research — Why It Matters
Microgravity (near-weightlessness in orbit) creates a unique laboratory environment unavailable on Earth. Objects and fluids behave differently; biological processes change; materials can be manufactured with different crystalline structures. Gaganyaan's mandate explicitly includes encouraging and supporting microgravity experiments — making it scientifically valuable beyond just national prestige.
| Research Area | What Changes in Microgravity | Application on Earth |
|---|---|---|
| 🦴 Muscle & Bone Atrophy | Muscles lose mass 5× faster than on Earth; bones lose density rapidly without gravity loading | Treatments for osteoporosis, muscular dystrophy, ageing. Shukla's Ax-4 experiment on muscle regeneration. |
| 🌱 Plant Biology | Seed germination and root orientation change without gravity signals (gravitropism) | Space agriculture, drought-resistant crop development. Seed behaviour study on Ax-4. |
| 💊 Drug Development | Protein crystals grow larger and purer in microgravity — better X-ray diffraction | More precise drug design. Many ISS experiments used for pharmaceutical research. |
| 🦠 Microbial Behaviour | Bacteria grow faster, become more virulent; algae (cyanobacteria) grow differently | Antibiotic resistance research. Cyanobacteria for sustainable O₂ generation on long missions. |
| 🐻 Tardigrades | These near-indestructible microscopic animals tested for survival, reproduction in space | Understanding biological resilience mechanisms. Shukla's Ax-4 tardigrade experiment. |
| 🧠 Neurological | Fluid shifts toward head; vision affected (ICP — intracranial pressure); cognitive changes | Understanding brain-fluid dynamics, ICP disorders, neurological treatments. |
| 🔬 Gaganyaan Research | ISRO actively promotes micro-gravity experiments — Gaganyaan mandated to support this | UPSC 2025 prelim asked which missions support microgravity research (answer: all three — Axiom-4, SpaDeX, Gaganyaan) |
🧾 Previous Year Questions (PYQs)
Answer: (c) All three. Axiom-4 — 60 experiments from 31 countries including ISRO's 7 experiments on microgravity (muscle repair, tardigrades, algae, seeds, neurological effects). SpaDeX — Space Docking Experiment (Dec 2024) tested rendezvous and docking critical for Gaganyaan and future space station; included microgravity experiments. Gaganyaan — explicitly mandated by ISRO to encourage and support microgravity research in its objectives. All three are ISRO missions/collaborations focused on human spaceflight and microgravity science. Trap: students may think only Gaganyaan qualifies — but Axiom-4 and SpaDeX both also support microgravity research.
Answer: (b) 2 and 3 only. Statement 1 ✗ — Gaganyaan will NOT go to the ISS; it will orbit in its own Low Earth Orbit at 400 km altitude. The duration is 3–7 days (not 6 months). ISS is different from Gaganyaan's orbit mission. Statement 2 ✔ — Vyommitra is India's half-humanoid robot designed to fly in uncrewed G1 mission (and later G2). Statement 3 ✔ — TV-D1 (Test Vehicle Abort Mission-1) on October 21, 2023 successfully demonstrated the Crew Escape System — separating the crew module from the rocket in a simulated mid-flight emergency. This was a critical safety milestone.
Para 1 — What: Gaganyaan = India's first human spaceflight programme; 3 astronauts to 400 km LEO; 3–7 days; splashdown in Bay of Bengal. India would be 4th nation (after USA, Russia, China) with independent human spaceflight. Para 2 — Technology: HLVM3 (human-rated LVM3, CE-20 cleared Feb 2024); Crew Module (pressurized, TPS, re-entry capable, HAL-manufactured); Service Module; CES (TV-D1 Oct 2023 success); ECLSS (life support — O₂, CO₂, pressure, temperature); 10-parachute recovery (IADT-01 Aug 2025); Vyommitra for uncrewed G1 (H2 2026). Para 3 — Significance: Strategic autonomy; scientific (microgravity research — medicine, agriculture, materials); economic (space industry, jobs); inspiration (youth in STEM); diplomatic (foreign policy, international partnerships); Bharatiya Antariksh Station (BAS) by 2035; Moon by 2040 foundation. Para 4 — Current Affairs: Shubhanshu Shukla — Axiom-4 (June–July 2025), 2nd Indian in space, ISS experiments (₹600 crore), Ashoka Chakra 2026; Mission MITRA (April 2026, Ladakh). G1 expected H2 2026, H1 crewed Q1 2027. Para 5 — Challenges: Regenerative environment design; crew safety (radiation, zero-gravity health effects); technology indigenisation (91% indigenous); delays (COVID, testing); lack of domestic training facilities (Russia/USA dependence). Conclusion: Gaganyaan transforms India from a launch services provider to a full-spectrum human spaceflight nation — with the eventual Bharatiya Antariksh Station as the destination.
📝 Prelims Practice MCQs
🧩 Mains Answer Framework
🧠 Memory Tricks & FAQs
🔑 Lock These In for Prelims Day
Will the Gaganyaan crew module go to the ISS?
What does "human-rated" mean for LVM3?
Why has Gaganyaan been delayed so many times?
🏁 Conclusion
🚀 Gaganyaan — India's Giant Leap to Human Spaceflight
When Shubhanshu Shukla floated aboard the International Space Station on June 26, 2025, he carried with him the weight of a 41-year wait — the years since Rakesh Sharma looked down at India from space in 1984. In those 18 days on the ISS, conducting experiments on muscle repair, water bears, and algae growth, India moved from being a spectator of human spaceflight to an active participant. When he received the Ashoka Chakra on Republic Day 2026, the message was clear: India's astronaut era had begun.
Gaganyaan is the programme that systematises that leap. HLVM3 assembled at Sriharikota. CE-20 human-rated. TV-D1 proving the crew can escape danger. Parachutes tested from IAF helicopters in August 2025. Four Gaganyatris preparing in Ladakh's wilderness in April 2026. Vyommitra waiting for her launch aboard G1. Every test, every delay that was accepted in the name of safety — each one represents ISRO's commitment to not losing a single life in the pursuit of this dream.
The crewed H1 mission, targeting Q1 2027, will make India only the 4th nation in history to independently launch humans to space. But that is only the beginning. Gaganyaan is the foundation of the Bharatiya Antariksh Station (2035), the Indian Moon mission (2040), and eventually human missions beyond — to Mars and the asteroids. As ISRO Chairman put it: the first step is to get Indians to LEO. The second step is to never stop.


