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CA Topic

Delay in India’s Samudrayaan Mission

Brief Context

Context A crucial set of tests on the Samudrayaan, India’s first manned-submersible mission, has been pushed to mid-next year due to delays in procuring syntactic foam cladding from France. About Samudrayaan Mission The Samudrayaan Mission is a key component of India’s Deep Ocean Mission. It involves the development of MATSYA 6000, an indigenously designed, fourth-generation manned submersible capable of carrying three people to a depth of 6,000 metres.

Source Content

Syllabus: GS3/Science and Technology

Context

  • A crucial set of tests on the Samudrayaan, India’s first manned-submersible mission, has been pushed to mid-next year due to delays in procuring syntactic foam cladding from France.
    • This foam is essential for buoyancy and must be fitted before the scheduled 500-metre trial dive.

About Samudrayaan Mission

  • The Samudrayaan Mission is a key component of India’s Deep Ocean Mission. It involves the development of MATSYA 6000, an indigenously designed, fourth-generation manned submersible capable of carrying three people to a depth of 6,000 metres.
    • MATSYA 6000 is designed to operate for 12 hours, with an emergency endurance of up to 96 hours.
  • It is being developed by National Institute of Ocean Technology (Chennai), an autonomous institute under the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES).
  • India’s research vessel Sagar Nidhi will be used to deploy and recover the MATSYA 6000.
  • The mission has an estimated budget of ₹4,077 crore and is being implemented in phases over a five-year period from 2021 to 2026.
samudrayaan mission

Significance

  • India can harness its 11,098-km coastline, nine coastal states, and 1,382 islands through a blue economy strategy strengthened by the Samudrayaan Mission.
  • Enables exploration of deep-sea minerals, fuels, and biodiversity, with nearly 95% of the deep ocean still unexplored.
  • Strengthens the security of undersea telecommunication cables, which is crucial as India’s data transmission capacity is expected to quadruple with new submarine cables by 2025.
  • Places India among an elite group of nations including the US, Russia, China, Japan, and France with deep-sea human exploration capability.

Key Challenges

  • Vessel Development: Precise thickness of titanium alloy sphere is required, and even 0.2 mm deviation in thickness risks collapse.
    • The 2023 implosion of OceanGate’s Titan submersible on a Titanic dive highlights the critical importance of precision engineering.
  • Life Support Systems: Oxygen regulation and carbon dioxide scrubbing are critical.
  • Aquanaut Health: Requires high physical fitness, tolerance for limited food and water, and the ability to stay in confined spaces for up to 96 hours.
  • Communication: Radio waves fail underwater, requiring acoustic telephones.
    • India developed its own system, though initial tests struggled with temperature and salinity effects. Later trials in the open ocean confirmed functionality.
  • Foreign Dependence: Syntactic foam (for buoyancy) sourced from France. Pressure testing of the titanium hull will be conducted in Russia.

Current Update

  • NIOT has built a steel prototype of the submersible for preliminary trials. 
  • Simulated dives up to 100 metres completed successfully.
  • Pending: 500-metre test, delayed due to late arrival of syntactic foam.
  • After 500-m trials, the final titanium hull will be sent to Russia for pressure testing for 6,000-m depth.

Source: TH

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