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Inspirational Desk, Delhi magazine: Hemvati Nandan Bahuguna Garhwal University (HNB Garhwal University) assistant-professor Alok Sagar Gautam has been selected to contribute to ISRO’s upcoming Venus Orbiter Mission, Shukrayaan-1 — marking a rare instance of a scientist from a Himalayan state-university being tapped for a national interplanetary mission.
What makes this selection special
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The Shukrayaan-1 mission is India’s first dedicated mission to Venus, aiming for a 2028 launch.
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During a two-day national science meet held at ISRO headquarters in Bengaluru on October 29–30, 2025, Gautam presented his research and participated in panel discussions on atmospheric modelling, simulation techniques, and data-retrieval methods relevant for studying Venus’s atmosphere and surface.
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The mission aims to probe Venus’s dense atmosphere, surface and subsurface structures, cloud and aerosol dynamics, ionosphere behavior and solar wind interactions — using advanced instruments like high-resolution radar and atmospheric sensors.
Gautam’s background & scientific credentials
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Gautam has a PhD from Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM), Pune, and previously held a Junior Associateship at International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), Italy.
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He has participated in major research campaigns — including the 28th Indian Scientific Expedition to Antarctica — where he collected environmental data under extreme conditions.
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At HNB Garhwal University (since July 2013), his research has focused on atmospheric aerosols, cloud dynamics, climate change, air-quality monitoring; he even established what is described as India’s highest cloud observatory at the university’s Swami Ram Teerth campus.
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His contributed research includes studies on ions and aerosols in the atmosphere, with published papers in national/international journals.
What this means for Indian science & young researchers
Gautam’s selection signals that top-tier space science contributions can come from beyond the elite IIT/IISc-circle. It shows that dedicated researchers at state and central universities — even in remote Himalayan regions — can play a key role in national and global space projects.
It may inspire more students from smaller towns and lesser-known institutions to dream big: that from valley classrooms and mountain campuses, one can aim for the stars.
About Shukrayaan-1 (the mission he’s part of)
The Venus Orbiter Mission — Shukrayaan-1 — has been formally approved by the Indian government, with a planned launch on 29 March 2028.
Its goals: examine Venus’s thick atmosphere (full of carbon dioxide and sulfuric-acid clouds), probe its surface and subsurface geology, study cloud and aerosol behavior, analyze ionosphere and solar-wind interactions, and investigate why Venus — despite being similar to Earth in size — evolved so differently.
