Shubhanshu Shukla returns safely, next mission: Helping Gaganan. Bharat News

On Tuesday at 3.02 pm (IST), with a gentle splash of Grace in the Pacific Ocean on the coast of San Diego, Indian astronaut Shubhinhu Shukla (Shaksa) ended his mission, with months of training in the months of training, orbiting, and India’s latest progressed in human spaceflight participation.When the Wing Commander (RTD) Rakesh Sharma riding in a Soviet spacecraft in April 1984 increased in space, Shax was not even born. It will be another one and a half years before entering the world. Forty years later, the Axiom-4 (AX-4) mission of the Shaks comes at a time when India is entering a deep entry into the human spacecraft, expanding the ambitions beyond satellites and rockets.And it has not survived the shock, who said in his last speech to the International Space Station (ISS): “As this journey is complete … India’s human spaceflight journey is both long and challenging. But I assure you, even if we decide, the stars are still attained. ,Welcoming the Shax, PM Modi said as India’s first astronaut for ISS, he has inspired a billion dreams through his dedication, courage and leading spirit. “This is another milestone towards our own human space flight mission – Gaganan,” the PM said.Re -entry and splashGrace, Dragon Capsule carrying Shaks, Mission Commander Paigi Whitson, Mission expert Tibor Kapu and Slavose Uznanski, were ignored from ISS at 4.45 pm on Monday. As part of the re-entry and splashdown operation, around 2.07 pm on Tuesday, Grace began 18 minutes of de-arbit burn, and by 2.27 pm, Grace jumped the trunk (with solar panels and radiators), and the nose cone closed by 2.33 pm.Around 2.57 pm, Grace deployed the drog parachute and about a minute later, four main parachutes were posted at a height of 1,000 meters. In a three -minute operation, these parachutes reduced the velocity of Grace together from 563kmmph to 23 km per hour, as it fell from the height to 800 meters, 600 meters and 400 meters before the splashdown.Recovery operationAt 3.07 pm, Pegi gave radio radio for mission control that the crew was ready for recovery and by 3.10 pm, the recovery boats reached the grace. Recovery personnel, wearing PPE suits, were first checked for dangerous gases around Grace before rigging in capsules at 3.15 pm, as the flight surgeons stood to conduct for initial medical tests.Between 3.29 am and 3.30 pm, Grace was nested on the recovery ship “Shannon”, when the recovery teams began some regular leakage checks and de-rigging and ensured that the crew was safe to get out of the side hatch or get out.By 3.37 pm, Grace was being taken to a deck from his early place on Shannon, where the crew was expected to be recovered. Between 3.40 pm and 3.41 pm, the recovery personnel opened the side hatch and began preparations to allow the crew to be ignored.At 3.49 pm, Peggy exited the capsule with a smile, followed by Shax and mission expert Slavoz Uznansky and Tibor Kapu in the next few minutes. The crew was then taken to a helicopter to land. After medical checks, they will be taken to Houston for de-brefing and other procedures.Learn for GagananAs a shave, ISRO has also acknowledged the importance of the mission that costs Rs 548 crore in India. The agency said, “AX-4 is a small step in class, but there is a huge leap in search of India’s human spacecraft,” the agency called a post-launch. ISRO President V Narayanan said that emphasizing the consequences of learning-an internal passenger training (for two), mission operations, and hardware-software-human interfaces-could not be measured purely in monetary terms, told TOI that X-4 is more than the cost.Lieutenant Lieutenant General (Rtired) Ak Bhatt, Director General of Indian Space Association, said: “This is a step for India’s future crew space journey, which includes the goals of landing an Indian on the Gaganian and the moon by 2040. It will not only support ISRO, but will also promote both global and Indian private space industries.”Sabba Rao Pavuluri, president of the SATCOM Industries Association-India, who echoed Bhatt’s views, said: “… while our ancestors discovered planets with intuition, we will search the planets with experimentation and are going there. Shukla’s mission is the first step to realize the ‘Spaces of India’.”