Shukrayaan-1 Venus Orbiter Mission – UPSC Notes

Shukrayaan-1 Venus Orbiter Mission UPSC Notes | ISRO | Legacy IAS Bangalore
Science & Technology · Space · UPSC GS-III

Shukrayaan-1 — India's First Mission to Venus 🟡

Complete UPSC Notes — Why Venus, what Shukrayaan will study, 19 payloads, extreme challenges (460°C, 90× pressure, sulfuric acid clouds), Cabinet approval Sep 2024, launch date March 29, 2028 on LVM-3, Venus orbit insertion July 19, 2028. Updated April 2026.

✅ Cabinet Approved Sep 18, 2024 Launch: Mar 29, 2028 Venus Orbit: Jul 19, 2028 LVM-3 (upgraded from GSLV Mk II) 19 payloads — 16 Indian + 3 international India's 2nd interplanetary mission
📚 Legacy IAS — Civil Services Coaching, Bangalore  ·  Updated: April 2026
Section 01

🔥 10-Second Revision

📌 One-liner: Shukrayaan-1 (VOM = Venus Orbiter Mission) = India's first mission to Venus. Cabinet approved September 18, 2024. Launch: March 29, 2028 on LVM-3 from Sriharikota. Venus orbit insertion: July 19, 2028 (112-day journey). India's 2nd interplanetary mission after Mangalyaan. Cost: ~₹1,236–1,500 crore. 19 scientific payloads from India, Russia, Sweden, Germany.
460°C
Average surface temperature of Venus — hottest planet
90×
Atmospheric pressure compared to Earth
112 days
Journey from Earth to Venus (launch to orbit)
19
Scientific payloads — 16 Indian + 2 collab + 1 intl
Section 02

🟡 Why Venus? — Earth's Evil Twin

Venus is called Earth's twin because it is almost the same size, mass, and density — and formed at the same time from the same solar nebula. Yet today Venus is the most hostile planet in the solar system — hotter than Mercury (despite being farther from the Sun), with crushing pressure and sulfuric acid rain. Understanding WHY Venus evolved so differently from Earth is the key to understanding Earth's own future climate risk.

Section 03 — Must Know

🌍🟡 Earth vs Venus — Why the Twin Went Wrong

🌍

Earth — The Habitable Twin

Diameter
12,742 km
Mass
1.0× (reference)
Surface Temp
15°C average — habitable
Atmosphere
78% N₂, 21% O₂ — breathable
Pressure
1 atm (reference)
Rotation
24 hours (day)
Magnetic field
Strong — protects from solar wind
Water
71% surface covered in liquid water
Moons
1 (The Moon)
🟡

Venus — The Hostile Twin

Diameter
12,104 km (~95% of Earth)
Mass
0.815× Earth
Surface Temp
~460°C — hottest planet; hotter than Mercury!
Atmosphere
96% CO₂ — extreme greenhouse effect; sulfuric acid clouds
Pressure
90 atm — like being 900m deep in Earth's ocean
Rotation
243 Earth days — LONGER than its year (224.7 days)! Rotates BACKWARDS.
Magnetic field
Very weak — solar wind strips the atmosphere
Water
No liquid water — all evaporated billions of years ago
Moons
0
🔑 The Big Question Shukrayaan Will Help Answer: Venus and Earth started the same. But Venus underwent a runaway greenhouse effect — CO₂ built up, trapped heat, oceans evaporated, more CO₂ released from rocks, more heat trapped... until the surface was 460°C. Could Earth follow the same path? Shukrayaan's data will help climate models understand how runaway greenhouse warming works — directly informing predictions about Earth's climate future.
Section 04

🛸 Mission Design — Spacecraft & Orbit Strategy

🛸 Shukrayaan-1 Mission Profile — Launch to Venus Orbit
🌍
EARTH
Mar 29, 2028
↑ LVM-3 launch
EPO: 170×36,000 km
☀️
SUN
passes around
→ 112 days transit
Hohmann transfer arc
🟡
VENUS
Jul 19, 2028
VOI
Step 1 — Launch
Mar 29, 2028
LVM-3 lifts off from Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota
Step 2 — Parking Orbit
Earth EPO
LVM-3 places Shukrayaan in 170 km × 36,000 km elliptical parking orbit
Step 3 — Trans-Venus
Injection burn
Main engine fires; spacecraft leaves Earth's gravity on curved path to Venus
Step 4 — Transit
112 days in deep space
Hohmann transfer orbit around the Sun. Mid-course corrections possible.
Step 5 — VOI
Jul 19, 2028
Venus Orbit Insertion — engine slows spacecraft into 500 × 60,000 km elliptical orbit
Step 6 — Science Orbit
Aerobraking
Repeated dips in Venus' atmosphere lower orbit to ~200 × 600 km polar orbit for science
🛸 Mass
~2,500 kg
📦 Payload
100 kg / 19 instruments
⚡ Power
500 W
🚀 Vehicle
LVM-3 (upgraded)
🌀 Initial orbit
500 × 60,000 km
🔬 Science orbit
~200 × 600 km polar
📌 Aerobraking: Instead of burning large amounts of fuel to slow down and enter a low orbit around Venus, Shukrayaan-1 will use aerobraking — repeatedly dipping into Venus' upper atmosphere, using atmospheric drag to gradually slow the spacecraft and lower its orbit. Same technique planned for Mangalyaan-2. Saves enormous fuel mass → allows 100 kg of scientific payload instead of fuel. Venus' thick atmosphere (actually helpful here!) makes aerobraking very effective.
Section 05 — Very Important

🔬 Scientific Payloads — 19 Instruments

As of October 2024: 16 Indian payloads + 2 collaborative payloads + 1 international payload = 19 total. Total payload mass: ~100 kg. International contributors: Russia (VIRAL), Sweden (VISWAS collab with ISRO), Germany (RAVI collab with ISRO). A National Science Meet was held in Delhi (October 2025) to finalise research strategies.
📡 VSAR
Venus S-Band SAR

Flagship instrument. High-resolution synthetic aperture radar — maps Venus' surface through its thick clouds. Searches for active volcanism. Up to 4× resolution of NASA's Magellan (1989). Can penetrate cloud cover day and night in all conditions.

📻 Ground-Penetrating Radar
Sub-Surface Radar

Can penetrate several metres below Venus' surface — first-ever sub-surface study of Venus. Will reveal rock layer stratigraphy, subsurface features, and geological structures never before studied.

🌡️ VSEAM
Venus Surface Emissivity & Atmospheric Mapper

Studies Venus' atmosphere — volcanic hotspots, cloud structure, composition. Measures thermal emissions to identify geologically active regions and map atmospheric temperature profiles.

📷 VTC + VCMC
Thermal Camera + Cloud Monitor

Venus Thermal Camera maps thermal emissions from Venusian clouds. Venus Cloud Monitoring Camera studies wave phenomena and lightning on Venus — a largely unexplored aspect of Venusian meteorology.

🔬 VIRAL (Russia)
Venus InfraRed Atmospheric gases Linker

International payload developed jointly by France's CNES and Russia's space agency. Studies Venus' atmospheric chemical composition in infrared — detecting CO₂, CO, H₂O, SO₂, and potentially phosphine (possible life indicator).

☀️ VISWAS + RAVI
Solar Wind & Ionosphere Studies

VISWAS (ISRO + Sweden / IRF): Studies how charged solar wind particles interact with Venus' ionosphere — why Venus has no magnetic protection. RAVI (ISRO + Germany): Radio anatomy of Venus' ionosphere — understanding atmospheric escape processes.

📌 Three Core Research Areas (ISRO's own classification): (1) Surface/sub-surface stratigraphy & re-surfacing — VSAR + ground-penetrating radar; (2) Atmospheric chemistry, dynamics, and composition — VSEAM, VTC, VCMC, VIRAL; (3) Solar wind interaction with Venusian ionosphere — VISWAS, RAVI. Sub-surface study is a world first — no spacecraft has ever studied what lies beneath Venus' surface.
Section 06

⚠️ Why Venus is Extremely Difficult to Explore

🌡️ 460°C Surface Temperature

Hotter than Mercury despite being farther from the Sun — because Venus' 96% CO₂ atmosphere creates a runaway greenhouse effect. Most electronics fail above ~125°C. The longest any spacecraft survived on Venus' surface: just 2 hours 7 minutes (Soviet Venera-13, 1981).

💧 Sulfuric Acid Clouds

Venus' upper atmosphere (45-70 km altitude) is dominated by thick sulfuric acid clouds. These corrode most spacecraft materials including titanium and stainless steel. Shukrayaan orbits above these clouds — landing would be impossible for India's current technology.

🏋️ 90× Atmospheric Pressure

Venus' surface pressure is 90 times Earth's — equivalent to being 900 metres deep in Earth's ocean. Any lander must withstand enormous crushing forces. This is why Soviet Venera probes had to be specially hardened like submarines.

📡 Communication Difficulties

Venus' thick atmosphere and ionosphere attenuate (weaken) radio signals. The planet's highly reflective sulfuric acid clouds cause signal scattering. Communication with Shukrayaan requires careful antenna design and may need Earth-Venus conjunction management.

⚡ Power Systems Challenge

Venus receives less sunlight at the surface due to thick clouds — solar panels are less effective than at Earth. However, Shukrayaan is an orbiter not a lander, so solar panels work above the cloud layer where sunlight is adequate.

🔄 Retrograde Rotation

Venus rotates in the opposite direction to Earth and most planets (retrograde), and completes one rotation in 243 Earth days — longer than its year (224.7 days). This creates unusual day-night temperature patterns that affect spacecraft thermal management.

Section 07

🌍 Global Venus Missions — Past, Present & Future

MissionAgency/YearTypeKey AchievementStatus
Venera Series🇷🇺 USSR / 1961–1984Flybys, Orbiters, Landers, BalloonsFirst Venus landers; Venera-13 survived 2h 7min on surface; Venera-9 first surface imagesComplete (historic)
Pioneer Venus🇺🇸 NASA / 1978Orbiter + MultiprobeFirst radar mapping of Venus, atmospheric studies, detected lightningComplete
Magellan🇺🇸 NASA / 1989OrbiterMapped 98% of Venus' surface with radar; discovered volcanoes, rifts, cratersComplete (1994)
Venus Express🇪🇺 ESA / 2005OrbiterStudied atmosphere and climate; found evidence of lightning and possible recent volcanic activityComplete (2015)
Akatsuki🇯🇵 JAXA / 2010OrbiterStudies atmospheric circulation; Super-rotating atmosphere (300+ km/h winds) mappedOperational
Shukrayaan-1 / VOM🇮🇳 ISRO / 2028OrbiterFirst sub-surface study; 4× Magellan resolution SAR; 19 payloads; India's 2nd interplanetary missionLaunch: Mar 2028
DAVINCI🇺🇸 NASA / ~2030sDescent probeWill study Venus' atmosphere during descent through a titanium sphere; look for noble gases, waterIn development
VERITAS🇺🇸 NASA / ~2031OrbiterHigh-resolution surface mapping; detect active volcanism; surface deformation measurementIn development
EnVision🇪🇺 ESA / ~2031OrbiterHigh-resolution surface maps; subsurface radar; atmospheric chemistry; coordinate with VERITASIn development
Venera-D🇷🇺 RoscosmosOrbiter + LanderProposed Russian return to Venus; long-duration lander using high-temperature electronicsProposed
📌 Exam Note — Window every 19 months: Earth-Venus optimal launch windows occur roughly every 19 months (when the two planets are closest). Very good "ideal windows" (minimise fuel further) occur approximately every 8 years. ISRO's chosen 2028 window is a good one — multiple agencies (NASA's VERITAS, ESA's EnVision) are also targeting 2031 (the next ideal window). This is why there's a global Venus exploration renaissance — 2028–2031 will see multiple new missions reach Venus simultaneously.
Section 08 — Current Affairs

🆕 Significance & 2024–2026 Current Affairs

Sep 18 2024Union Cabinet Formally Approves VOM 🆕

The Union Cabinet approved the Venus Orbiter Mission (VOM / Shukrayaan-1) on September 18, 2024 under PM Narendra Modi. This formal government approval unlocked full mission funding (~₹1,236 crore). ISRO Chairman confirmed the 2028 launch target. The same cabinet meeting approved NGLV "Project Soorya" and other space missions — making September 18, 2024 a landmark day for India's space programme.

Oct 1 2024Launch Date Set: March 29, 2028 🆕

ISRO officially announced the launch date: March 29, 2028 on LVM-3 (upgraded from the earlier GSLV Mk II plan). The spacecraft will take 112 days to reach Venus, entering Venusian orbit on July 19, 2028. Initial orbit: 500 km × 60,000 km elliptical. Final science orbit: ~200 × 600 km polar orbit (after aerobraking). As of October 2024: 16 Indian payloads, 2 collaborative, 1 international confirmed.

Oct 2025National Science Meet — Research Strategies Finalised

ISRO issued a further call for potential research in late September 2025. A National Level Science Meet was held in Delhi (October 2025) to debate and finalise research strategies for Shukrayaan-1. Scientists from across India's academic and research institutions participated in determining what specific questions each payload should focus on during the 4-year mission.

2024Upgrade to LVM-3 — More Power, More Payload

ISRO upgraded the launch vehicle from the originally planned GSLV Mk II to LVM-3 (Launch Vehicle Mark-3). LVM-3 is significantly more powerful — it allows Shukrayaan to carry more scientific payload and/or more fuel, enabling a direct-to-Venus trajectory and better orbit insertion. LVM-3 has already proven itself with OneWeb, Chandrayaan-3, and now NVS satellite launches.

2024International Collaboration — Russia, Sweden, Germany

International payloads confirmed: VIRAL (jointly developed by France's CNES and Russia — Venus infrared atmospheric gases analyser). VISWAS (ISRO Space Physics Lab + Swedish IRF — solar wind interaction). RAVI (ISRO + Germany — radio anatomy of ionosphere). Swedish Ambassador Jan Thesleff reaffirmed ISRO-SSC collaboration in September 2024. Open payload model (like Chandrayaan-1) ensures global scientific participation.

ContextPhosphine on Venus — Life Possibility

In 2020, researchers detected phosphine (PH₃) in Venus' clouds — a gas that on Earth is primarily produced by biological organisms (anaerobic bacteria). This raised the possibility of microbial life in Venus' cooler upper atmosphere (50-60 km altitude, ~60°C, pressure similar to Earth's surface). Though contested, this discovery dramatically increased scientific interest in Venus. Shukrayaan's VIRAL instrument can detect and measure phosphine — potentially confirming or ruling out biological activity.

Section 09

🧾 Previous Year Questions (PYQs)

UPSC 2014 Prelims — GS Paper I
Consider the following statements regarding Venus:
1.Venus is the hottest planet in the Solar System despite not being the closest to the Sun.
2.A day on Venus (rotation period) is longer than a year on Venus (revolution period).
3.Venus has a strong magnetic field that deflects solar wind.
Which of the above statements is/are correct?
A1 only
B1 and 2 only
C2 and 3 only
D1, 2 and 3
📌 Explanation
Answer: (b) 1 and 2 only. Statement 1 ✔ — Venus is hotter than Mercury (~460°C vs Mercury's ~430°C day side) despite Mercury being closer to the Sun. Venus' thick 96% CO₂ atmosphere creates an extreme greenhouse effect — trapping heat. Mercury has virtually no atmosphere, so heat escapes. Statement 2 ✔ — Venus takes 243 Earth days to rotate once (a Venusian day), but only 224.7 Earth days to orbit the Sun (a Venusian year). A day on Venus is longer than its year! Statement 3 ✗ — Venus has a very weak magnetic field (unlike Earth's strong field). This is why solar wind directly strips away Venus' upper atmosphere — one reason it lost its water.
UPSC 2025 Prelims — GS Paper I
With reference to India's Shukrayaan-1 (Venus Orbiter Mission), consider the following statements:
1.It was formally approved by the Union Cabinet on September 18, 2024.
2.It will be launched by GSLV Mk II and is scheduled for December 2026.
3.The mission will include a ground-penetrating radar to study Venus' sub-surface — the first sub-surface study of Venus by any spacecraft.
Which of the above statements is/are correct?
A1 only
B2 and 3 only
C1 and 3 only
D1, 2 and 3
📌 Explanation
Answer: (c) 1 and 3 only. Statement 1 ✔ — Union Cabinet approved VOM on September 18, 2024 under PM Modi. Statement 2 ✗ — Double error: (a) the launch vehicle has been upgraded to LVM-3 (not GSLV Mk II), and (b) the launch date is March 29, 2028 (not December 2026). This is the key current affairs trap. Statement 3 ✔ — Shukrayaan-1 carries a ground-penetrating radar that can study several metres below Venus' surface — this would be the first-ever sub-surface study of Venus, as previous missions (Magellan, Venus Express, Akatsuki) only studied the surface and atmosphere.
UPSC 2023 Mains — GS Paper III
What is Shukrayaan-1? Discuss the scientific objectives of India's planned Venus mission and its significance for India and the global scientific community.
📌 Answer Framework
Para 1 — What: Shukrayaan-1 (VOM = Venus Orbiter Mission) — India's first mission to Venus, 2nd interplanetary mission (after Mangalyaan 2014). Cabinet approved Sep 18, 2024. Launch: Mar 29, 2028 on LVM-3. Venus orbit: Jul 19, 2028 (112 days). Cost: ~₹1,236 crore. ~2,500 kg orbiter with 100 kg payload (19 instruments). Para 2 — Objectives (3 areas): (1) Surface/sub-surface — VSAR (SAR radar, 4× Magellan resolution), ground-penetrating radar (first-ever Venus sub-surface study), map active volcanism; (2) Atmospheric chemistry and dynamics — VSEAM, VTC, VCMC, VIRAL (phosphine/life detection, CO₂, SO₂); (3) Solar wind interaction with ionosphere — VISWAS (ISRO+Sweden), RAVI (ISRO+Germany). Para 3 — Significance: Earth's twin understanding (runaway greenhouse warning for Earth); Venus as exoplanet proxy; phosphine-life possibility (VIRAL instrument); first sub-surface data; aerobraking technology demonstration; strategic autonomy in deep-space exploration; international collaboration model (Russia, Sweden, Germany); India's 2nd interplanetary mission after Mangalyaan proves India is a genuine planetary exploration power. Para 4 — Context: Venus renaissance — NASA DAVINCI, VERITAS, ESA EnVision, China's plans all for 2028-2031 window; ISRO joins global effort. Launch window every 19 months, ideal every 8 years (2031 next ideal). Para 5 — Challenges: 460°C temperature, 90× pressure, sulfuric acid clouds, retrograde rotation, communication difficulties — all addressed by keeping Shukrayaan as orbiter (not lander). Conclusion: Shukrayaan will answer why Earth's neighbour became the solar system's most hostile planet — a question with direct implications for understanding Earth's own climate future.
Section 10

📝 Prelims Practice MCQs

Q1Which of the following correctly describes the current status and launch details of Shukrayaan-1?
(a) Approved in 2022; launched on GSLV Mk II in December 2024; now orbiting Venus
(b) Cabinet approved September 18, 2024; launch date set as March 29, 2028 on LVM-3; Venus orbit insertion expected July 19, 2028
(c) Approved in 2017; to be launched in 2031 to take advantage of the ideal Venus window; vehicle: PSLV-XL
(d) Approved in 2024; launch on GSLV Mk III in 2026; will also carry a lander to Venus' surface
Cabinet approved: September 18, 2024. Launch date: March 29, 2028 on LVM-3 (upgraded from earlier GSLV Mk II plan). Venus Orbit Insertion: July 19, 2028 (112 days journey). Option (a) is wrong — it was not launched in 2024. Option (c) is wrong — PSLV-XL cannot reach Venus. Option (d) is wrong — it's an orbiter only, no lander (landing Venus is beyond current technology). Shukrayaan is India's 2nd interplanetary mission after Mangalyaan (2013).
Q2Why is Venus hotter than Mercury despite being farther from the Sun?
(a) Venus has a stronger magnetic field that traps solar radiation
(b) Venus rotates faster, generating more internal heat
(c) Venus has a 96% CO₂ atmosphere that creates an extreme runaway greenhouse effect — trapping heat; Mercury has virtually no atmosphere so heat escapes into space
(d) Venus is closer to the Sun than Mercury during certain orbital positions
The key is greenhouse effect. Venus' atmosphere is 96% CO₂ — an extreme greenhouse gas. Sunlight enters Venus' atmosphere, heats the surface, and the infrared heat radiation cannot escape through the CO₂ — it's trapped and re-radiated back. Temperature keeps rising (runaway greenhouse). Venus: ~460°C. Mercury: ~430°C on sun side, but drops to -180°C on dark side (no atmosphere to retain heat). This is the core reason Shukrayaan matters — understanding Venus' runaway greenhouse helps model Earth's climate risk. Venus rotates very SLOWLY (243 days), not faster.
Q3What unique first will Shukrayaan-1 achieve in Venus exploration history?
(a) It will be the first mission to land on Venus' surface
(b) It will be the first mission to orbit Venus from any country
(c) It will carry a ground-penetrating radar — the first instrument ever to study Venus' sub-surface, revealing what lies beneath the planet's surface for the first time
(d) It will deploy a balloon probe in Venus' atmosphere — the first atmospheric balloon at Venus
Shukrayaan-1's ground-penetrating radar will study several metres below Venus' surface — no spacecraft in history has ever studied Venus' sub-surface. Previous missions (Magellan mapped the surface with radar; Venus Express studied atmosphere; Akatsuki studies weather) only observed the surface or atmosphere. Understanding what lies beneath the surface (rock layers, subsurface structures, possible magma chambers) is fundamental to understanding Venus' geological history. Option (a) is wrong — landing Venus is impossible with current technology (460°C, 90× pressure). Option (b) is wrong — many countries have orbited Venus (USA, USSR, ESA, Japan). Option (d) — while proposed, balloons are not confirmed as a primary payload for the 2028 mission.
Q4The detection of phosphine (PH₃) in Venus' atmosphere (2020) was scientifically significant because:
(a) It confirmed the presence of liquid water oceans beneath Venus' clouds
(b) Phosphine is primarily produced by biological organisms on Earth (anaerobic bacteria), so its presence on Venus could indicate microbial life in Venus' cooler upper atmosphere — the first potential biomarker detected beyond Earth
(c) Phosphine is a powerful greenhouse gas, explaining why Venus is hotter than Mercury
(d) It confirmed that Venus once had plate tectonics like Earth
Phosphine (PH₃) on Earth is produced primarily by anaerobic (oxygen-free) microorganisms and industrial processes. Its presence in Venus' atmosphere (at ~53 km altitude, where temperature is ~60°C and pressure is ~1 atm — similar to Earth's surface) is difficult to explain by known chemical processes alone. This raised the possibility of microbial life in Venus' upper atmosphere — the first potential biosignature detected beyond Earth. The finding remains contested scientifically, but Shukrayaan-1's VIRAL instrument (Russian-French) can measure atmospheric gases including phosphine — potentially confirming or refuting this extraordinary claim.
Q5Optimal launch windows from Earth to Venus occur approximately every 19 months. What creates this periodicity?
(a) The Sun's gravitational influence changes Venus' orbit every 19 months
(b) Earth's rotation speed changes every 19 months, affecting escape velocity
(c) Venus orbits the Sun faster than Earth (224.7 days vs 365 days), creating a "synodic period" of ~583 days (~19 months) — the time for Earth and Venus to return to the same relative positions, minimising travel distance and fuel
(d) Every 19 months, Venus passes through a region of space with less solar wind resistance
The synodic period of Venus (the time for it to return to the same position relative to Earth) is approximately 583 days (~19.4 months). At closest approach (inferior conjunction), Earth and Venus are only ~40 million km apart — versus ~260 million km at farthest. Launching near inferior conjunction minimises travel distance and fuel required. Venus orbits faster (224.7 days) and closer to the Sun than Earth — so the two planets "lap" each other every 19 months. Very optimal windows (minimum energy) come every ~8 years, which is why 2031 is considered particularly good for Venus missions. ISRO's 2028 date is a good window; the next best after that would be 2031.
Section 11

🧩 Mains Answer Framework

150 Words
250 Words
IntroductionShukrayaan-1 (Venus Orbiter Mission/VOM) is India's first planned mission to Venus — ISRO's 2nd interplanetary mission after Mangalyaan. Formally approved by the Union Cabinet on September 18, 2024, it is scheduled for launch on March 29, 2028 aboard LVM-3, with Venus orbit insertion on July 19, 2028 after a 112-day journey. Cost: ~₹1,236 crore.
Objectives and PayloadsShukrayaan-1 carries 19 scientific instruments (16 Indian, 2 collaborative, 1 international) across three research domains: (1) Surface/sub-surface mapping — VSAR (Venus SAR, 4× Magellan's resolution) and a ground-penetrating radar (world first for Venus); (2) Atmospheric chemistry — VIRAL (Russia-France, detects phosphine — possible life indicator) and thermal/cloud instruments; (3) Solar wind-ionosphere interaction — VISWAS (Sweden-ISRO) and RAVI (Germany-ISRO). Aerobraking will lower the initial 500×60,000 km orbit to ~200×600 km for science operations.
SignificanceVenus — Earth's twin in size but most hostile planet — underwent runaway greenhouse warming. Understanding this is crucial for Earth's climate modelling. Phosphine detection raises life possibilities. Sub-surface geology has never been studied. India joins a global Venus renaissance (NASA DAVINCI, VERITAS; ESA EnVision all targeting 2028-2031), cementing its interplanetary exploration credentials with Russia, Sweden, and Germany as scientific partners.
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IntroductionShukrayaan-1, India's first mission to Venus (officially "Venus Orbiter Mission"), represents ISRO's second venture into interplanetary space after the historic Mangalyaan (2013-2022). Formally approved by the Union Cabinet on September 18, 2024, the mission is scheduled for launch on March 29, 2028 on LVM-3, with Venus Orbit Insertion on July 19, 2028 after a 112-day transit. With a cost of approximately ₹1,236 crore, it carries 19 scientific instruments including collaborations with Russia, Sweden, and Germany.
Mission ArchitectureThe ~2,500 kg spacecraft will be placed by LVM-3 in an elliptical parking orbit (170 km × 36,000 km) before a trans-Venus injection burn. At Venus, it enters an initial orbit of 500 km × 60,000 km, then uses aerobraking — leveraging Venus' thick atmosphere as a natural brake — to lower to a ~200 × 600 km polar science orbit, saving significant fuel mass. Science payload capacity: 100 kg (19 instruments, 500W power).
Scientific Objectives and PayloadsThree core research areas: (1) Surface and sub-surface — VSAR (Venus S-Band SAR, 4× Magellan resolution, searches for active volcanism) and a ground-penetrating radar (first-ever Venus sub-surface study); (2) Atmospheric chemistry, dynamics, and composition — VSEAM (volcanic hotspots, cloud structure), VTC (thermal emissions), VCMC (cloud monitoring, lightning), and VIRAL (Russia-France, infrared atmospheric gases including phosphine — possible life indicator); (3) Solar wind interaction with ionosphere — VISWAS (ISRO-Sweden IRF, particle analysis) and RAVI (ISRO-Germany, radio anatomy of ionosphere). A national science meet in October 2025 finalised specific research strategies for each instrument.
Scientific SignificanceVenus is Earth's twin in size, density, and composition — yet became the most hostile planet in the solar system due to a runaway greenhouse effect (96% CO₂, ~460°C surface temperature, 90× atmospheric pressure). Understanding why Venus evolved so catastrophically differently from Earth directly informs climate models for Earth's own potential trajectories. The 2020 phosphine detection raised the extraordinary possibility of microbial life in Venus' upper atmosphere (~60°C, Earth-like pressure at 53 km altitude) — Shukrayaan's VIRAL can confirm or refute this. Sub-surface geology has never been studied at Venus, making Shukrayaan's ground-penetrating radar a genuine scientific frontier.
Strategic and Diplomatic SignificanceIndia joins a global Venus renaissance: NASA's DAVINCI and VERITAS, ESA's EnVision, and China's planned missions all target 2028-2031 windows. Shukrayaan's international open-payload model (Russia, Sweden, Germany) mirrors Chandrayaan-1's approach, strengthening India's scientific diplomacy. The mission demonstrates ISRO's progression from technology demonstration (Mangalyaan, 2013) to science-led interplanetary exploration with global collaboration. The cost-effective approach (~₹1,236 crore for a 19-payload Venus orbiter) continues India's tradition of maximising scientific return per rupee invested.
ConclusionShukrayaan-1 asks perhaps the most important question in planetary science: why did Earth's twin become the solar system's most dangerous world? The answer holds lessons not just about Venus, but about Earth's own climate resilience — and potentially, about whether life can exist in the most unexpected places in our solar neighbourhood.
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Section 12

🧠 Memory Tricks & FAQs

🔑 Lock These In for Prelims Day

What is itShukrayaan-1 = Venus Orbiter Mission (VOM). India's 1st mission to Venus. India's 2nd interplanetary mission (after Mangalyaan to Mars, 2013). Orbiter only — no lander (too hostile).
Key DatesCabinet approved: Sep 18, 2024. Launch: Mar 29, 2028. Venus arrival: Jul 19, 2028. Journey: 112 days. Window every 19 months; ideal every 8 years.
Launch VehicleLVM-3 (upgraded from earlier GSLV Mk II plan). NOT GSLV Mk II, NOT PSLV. LVM-3 = more powerful = more payload.
Venus FactsHottest planet (460°C) despite not being closest to Sun. 90× Earth pressure. 243 Earth days to rotate = longer than year (224.7 days). Rotates backwards (retrograde). 96% CO₂.
19 Payloads16 Indian + 2 collaborative + 1 international. Key: VSAR (SAR radar flagship), ground-penetrating radar (world first Venus sub-surface), VIRAL (Russia-France, phosphine/life).
World FirstFirst sub-surface study of Venus — ground-penetrating radar. No spacecraft has ever studied below Venus' surface. Previous missions only studied surface and atmosphere.
Phosphine Link2020: Phosphine (PH₃) detected in Venus clouds. Phosphine = possible life indicator (produced by anaerobic bacteria on Earth). VIRAL instrument on Shukrayaan can confirm/deny. Venus upper atmosphere = ~60°C, 1 atm pressure (habitable zone?).
Why is Shukrayaan-1 only an orbiter and not a lander?
Venus is uniquely hostile to landers: (1) 460°C surface temperature — electronics typically fail above 125°C. Standard components last minutes, not hours. (2) 90× atmospheric pressure — equivalent to 900 metres deep in Earth's ocean. Spacecraft must be constructed like submarines. (3) Sulfuric acid clouds — corrode most materials. Even Soviet Venera probes (the only successful Venus landers) survived just 23 minutes to 2 hours 7 minutes. India's current technology cannot build systems to survive Venus' surface for meaningful science. Future missions globally are exploring high-temperature electronics (silicon carbide circuits, radioisotope power) for future landers. For now, orbiting above the atmosphere allows science without the engineering impossibility of surface operations.
How is Shukrayaan-1 different from the previous Venus missions like Magellan?
Three key differences: (1) Sub-surface radar — Magellan (1989-1994) mapped the surface with synthetic aperture radar at about 120-300m resolution. Shukrayaan adds a ground-penetrating radar to study several metres below the surface — a world first. (2) Higher resolution — Shukrayaan's VSAR has up to 4× better resolution than Magellan's radar, enabling detection of features Magellan missed. (3) Comprehensive atmospheric science — Magellan was primarily a surface mapper. Shukrayaan has VIRAL for atmospheric chemistry (phosphine detection), VISWAS for solar wind interaction, VSEAM for atmospheric mapping — making it a more holistic mission. Compared to Japan's Akatsuki (weather only), Shukrayaan's scope is broader. The combination of surface + sub-surface + atmosphere + ionosphere instruments in one mission is unprecedented for Venus.
Section 13

🏁 Conclusion

🟡 Shukrayaan — Decoding Earth's Mirror Image

There is a haunting quality to Venus. A planet the same size as Earth, born at the same time, from the same material, in the same solar neighbourhood — yet today it is a world of crushing pressure, acid rain, and temperatures that melt lead. Somewhere in Venus' past, something went catastrophically wrong. Understanding what, and why, is not just planetary science — it is Earth science.

When ISRO's engineers designed Mangalyaan in 15 months and got it to Mars on the first attempt, they proved India could reach the planets. Shukrayaan-1 is the next chapter of that story — more ambitious, more scientifically rich, and more globally connected. Nineteen instruments. Collaborations with Russia, Sweden, and Germany. A ground-penetrating radar that will see beneath Venus for the first time in history. A radar mapper with four times the sharpness of any Venus radar that came before. And VIRAL — quietly listening for the phosphine signal that might mean something incredible is alive in Venus' clouds.

March 29, 2028 is a date to mark in India's interplanetary calendar. On that day, on an LVM-3 rocket from Sriharikota, India will begin its second journey to another planet — carrying with it not just instruments, but questions that matter for all of humanity: Why did Earth's twin become this? How do planets die? Is there life in those sulfuric acid clouds? Could Earth's climate follow the same terrible path?

Shukrayaan-1 will not answer all these questions. But it will bring India — and the world — closer to the answers than any spacecraft has managed to reach in more than three decades of Venusian silence.

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