Anomaly in PSLV detected and resolved: Jitendra


UPSC Study Note: PSLV Anomaly (PSLV-C62/EOS-N1) — Detection & Resolution


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1993 PSLV-D1 — first developmental flight (partial failure)
1994 PSLV-D2 — first fully successful flight
1999 PSLV-C2 — first multi-satellite launch (three satellites)
2008 PSLV-C11 — Chandrayaan-1 launch
2017 PSLV-C37 — world record: 104 satellites in single launch
2023 PSLV-C56 — DS-SAR & co-passenger mission (XPoSat, 2023)
Jan 2026 PSLV-C62 / EOS-N1 — anomaly detected; fleet grounded pending review [S2]

4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Full Name Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle
Administering Body ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation) under Department of Space (DoS)
Nodal Ministry Ministry of Science & Technology / PMO (DoS reports to PM)
Enabling Act Space Activities Act, 2023 (India's first dedicated space law)
Launch Pad Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC), Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh
Stage Configuration 4 stages: PS1 (solid) – PS2 (liquid, Vikas engine) – PS3 (solid) – PS4 (liquid)
Payload Capacity (SSO) ~1,750 kg to Sun-Synchronous Orbit (XL variant)
Mission — PSLV-C62 EOS-N1 (Earth Observation Satellite) — January 2026 [S2]
Anomaly Response National Level Expert Committee constituted; fleet stand-down pending corrective measures [S3]
Parliamentary Disclosure Jitendra Singh (MoS, PMO) — PIB Ref PRID 2247712 [S3]
SSLV Small Satellite Launch Vehicle — also covered in the same Parliamentary Q&A [S3]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Scientific / Technological

Geopolitical / Strategic

Governance / Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. PSLV stands for Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle — operated by ISRO under the Department of Space. [S1]
  2. PSLV has 4 stages: alternating solid (PS1, PS3) and liquid (PS2-Vikas, PS4) propulsion. [S1]
  3. PSLV's primary launch site is Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota (Andhra Pradesh). [S1]
  4. PSLV-C37 (February 2017) set a world record by launching 104 satellites in a single mission. [S1]
  5. PSLV-C62 / EOS-N1 is the mission that suffered an anomaly in January 2026. [S2]
  6. A National Level Expert Committee — not a parliamentary committee — was constituted to review the PSLV anomaly. [S3]
  7. The anomaly disclosure was made in Parliament by Dr. Jitendra Singh, MoS for the Prime Minister's Office (which oversees the Department of Space). [S3]
  8. India's first dedicated space law is the Space Activities Act, 2023. [S1]
  9. IN-SPACe (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre) was established in 2020 to regulate private space actors. [S3]
  10. NSIL (NewSpace India Ltd.) is ISRO's commercial arm responsible for marketing PSLV launch services. [S3]
  11. PSLV has a payload capacity of ~1,750 kg to SSO in its XL variant. [S1]
  12. EOS stands for Earth Observation Satellite — the series supported by PSLV for agriculture, disaster management, and cartography. [S2]
  13. Department of Space reports directly to the Prime Minister of India (not a line ministry like MoST). [S3]
  14. PSLV variants: Standard, CA (Core Alone), XL, DL, QL — differing in number of strap-on boosters. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

Detail
GS Paper GS-III (Science & Technology — Space; Indigenous Technology)
GS-II (Governance — Parliamentary oversight, accountability of PSUs/autonomous bodies)
Syllabus Headings GS-III: "Awareness in the fields of Space"; "Indigenization of technology and developing new technology"
GS-II: "Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability"

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Examine the significance of PSLV's reliability to India's commercial space ambitions and the implications of the PSLV-C62 anomaly for NSIL's launch manifest." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "Discuss the institutional mechanisms ISRO employs for failure analysis and return-to-flight certification. How does India's Space Activities Act 2023 strengthen accountability?" (GS-II/III, 15 marks) 3. "The Department of Space reports directly to the Prime Minister rather than a line ministry. Critically analyse the governance implications of this structure." (GS-II, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
SSLV (Small Satellite Launch Vehicle) Covered in the same parliamentary Q&A; India's next-gen launcher for small payloads
IN-SPACe & NSIL Institutional ecosystem around PSLV commercial operations; privatisation of launch services
Space Activities Act, 2023 Enabling legislation for all Indian space activities including liability post-anomaly
Chandrayaan-3 / Gaganyaan India's flagship missions; PSLV reliability underpins confidence in heavier LVM3 missions
Earth Observation Satellites (EOS series) The payload series EOS-N1 belongs to; critical for NatDis, agri, mapping
GSLV Mk-III / LVM3 Heavier sibling; understanding the full Indian launch vehicle family tree
India's Commercial Space Policy 2024 Policy framework enabling private players, relevant to NSIL's launch contracts

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Department of Space ≠ Ministry of Science & Technology: DoS reports to the PM, not MoST. Mixing these is a classic trap. [S3]
  2. PSLV-C62 is NOT the first PSLV failure: PSLV-D1 (1993) and PSLV-C39 (2017) had earlier failures. C62 is the third anomaly, not the first. [S1]
  3. "Jitendra Singh" confusion: He holds multiple portfolios (MoS PMO, MoS Personnel, MoS DoNER, MoS Science & Technology). In this context he speaks as MoS PMO/Department of Space, not as MoS Science & Technology. [S3]
  4. Expert Committee ≠ Parliamentary Committee: The body constituted is a technical/scientific National Level Expert Committee, not a Parliamentary Standing Committee or PAC. [S3]
  5. EOS-N1 ≠ EOS-06: These are distinct satellites. EOS-06 was launched on PSLV-C54 (2022); EOS-N1 is the PSLV-C62 payload (2026). Do not conflate them. [S2]

11. Sources