Target 2020 ST WWW - Iasparliament.com1 PDF
Target 2020 ST WWW - Iasparliament.com1 PDF
Target 2020 ST WWW - Iasparliament.com1 PDF
INDEX
1.25 Human Space Flight Centre ...................................... 17 1.66 Star Link satellites ..................................................... 32
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Government Initiatives and Programmes ...................... 69 5.44 Bombay Blood Group ................................................ 91
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5.67 Health Index 2019 - NITI Aayog ............................... 99 8.6 Hyperloop ................................................................ 118
5.68 World Vision Report ................................................ 100 8.7 Hydrogen-powered vehicles over Electric vehicles . 119
5.69 National Health Profile ........................................... 100 8.8 Indigenous Fuel Cell System.................................... 119
5.70 India State-Level Disease Burden Initiative ............ 101 8.9 Dark Fiber ............................................................... 120
6. Bio-Technology ...................................................... 101 8.10 Elastocaloric Effect ................................................. 120
6.1 Stem Cells................................................................ 101 8.11 Synthesis of New Ink ................................................ 120
6.2 Draft Guidelines for Stem Cell Research ................ 102 8.12 Tech Sagar ............................................................... 121
6.3 Earth BioGenome Project ....................................... 103 8.13 Tyre Pyrolysis .......................................................... 121
6.4 Gene Editing ........................................................... 103 8.14 Bio-Rock .................................................................. 121
6.5 Gene Silencing ........................................................ 104 8.15 NEON ...................................................................... 122
6.6 Three Parent Baby .................................................. 104 8.16 Lithium Sulfur (Li-S) Battery ................................... 122
6.7 Genetically Modified Mosquitoes ............................ 105 8.17 Lithium-ion Battery.................................................. 122
6.8 Gene Therapy for Cancer ........................................ 105 8.18 Thermal Battery Plant ............................................. 123
6.9 Status of GM Mosquitoes in India ........................... 106 8.19 Quantum Supremacy ................................................ 123
6.10 Human Antibodies in Lab ........................................ 106 8.20 Quantum Computing and Dots ................................ 124
6.11 Embryo Transfer Technology .................................. 107 8.21 Quantum Mechanics ................................................ 124
6.12 BIO International Convention ................................. 107 8.22 Block Chain Technology .......................................... 124
6.13 Restricted Use of Pesticides for Basmati ................. 107 8.23 Bitcoins .................................................................... 124
6.14 Dangers of artificial ripening.................................. 108 8.24 Cryptocurrencies ..................................................... 125
6.15 LRRK2 ..................................................................... 109 8.25 Kalam Centre for Science and Technology .............. 125
6.16 IndiGen ................................................................... 109 8.26 Belle II ..................................................................... 125
6.17 Global Bio-India 2019 ............................................ 109 8.27 Pratyush................................................................... 126
6.18 Golden Rice ............................................................. 109 8.28 Mihir ........................................................................ 126
6.19 Indian Cobra Genome Decoded .............................. 110 8.29 National Supercomputing Mission ........................... 126
6.20 POLYCRACK .......................................................... 111 8.30 Virtual Reality.......................................................... 127
6.21 Food Irradiation Centers ........................................ 111 8.31 Microsoft HoloLens-Augmented Reality .................. 127
6.22 Milk Adulteration .................................................... 111 8.32 Free Space Optical Communications ...................... 127
6.23 Bharatiya Poshan Krishi Kosh ................................ 112 8.33 4D Printing .............................................................. 127
6.24 Muktoshri Rice ........................................................ 112 8.34 Li-Fi ......................................................................... 127
6.25 Genome Mapping of Basmati Rice .......................... 112 8.35 Humanoid Robot-Sophia.......................................... 128
6.26 MicroRNAs .............................................................. 112 8.36 Change in the definition of ‘Kilogram’ .................... 128
7. Nuclear technology ................................................ 113 8.37 Purifies Terephthalic Acid (PTA) ............................ 129
7.1 Thorium-Based Nuclear Reactors ........................... 113 8.38 Indian Science Congress.......................................... 129
7.2 Pressurized Heavy Water Reactor........................... 114 9. Intellectual Property Rights ................................. 130
7.3 Russian-built Floating Nuclear Plant...................... 114 9.1 Different Categories of IPR ..................................... 130
7.4 Cyber Attacks on Kudankulam Nuclear Unit .......... 114 9.2 Patent Prosecution Highway Programme ............... 131
7.5 Nuclear Command Authority................................... 115 9.3 Technology and Innovation Support Centre ............ 131
7.6 Nuclear Recycle Board............................................ 115 9.4 Traditional Knowledge Digital Library ................... 132
7.7 Kovvada .................................................................. 116 9.5 Odisha's Rasagola - GI Tag..................................... 132
7.8 Nuclear Plant in M.P .............................................. 116 9.6 Erode Turmeric........................................................ 132
8. Innovations ............................................................ 116 9.7 Kandhamal Haldi .................................................... 132
8.1 Optoelectronics ....................................................... 116 9.8 Stone Sculptures of Mamallapuram ......................... 133
8.2 Shortwave Radio Transmissions.............................. 116 9.9 Etikoppaka Toys ...................................................... 133
8.3 Data Localization .................................................... 117 9.10 Shahi Litchi .............................................................. 133
8.4 Artificial Gravity ..................................................... 117 9.11 Alphonso Mango ...................................................... 133
8.5 5G Technology ........................................................ 117 9.12 Some of the registered GIs- State Wise .................... 134
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TARGET 2020
1. SPACE TECHNOLOGY
Introduction
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A satellite in the polar orbit approx. takes 90 minutes for a full rotation. As a result, a satellite can observe the
entire surface in the time span of 24 hours.
They are often used for applications such as monitoring crops,
forests and even global security.
Sun Synchronous Orbit –It is a special case of Polar Orbit
moving from pole to pole allowing satellite to pass over any given
point of the planet's surface at roughly the same local time each
day.
Since there are 365 days in a year and 360 degrees in a circle, it
means that the satellite has to shift its orbit by approximately one
degree per day.
These orbits are used for satellites that need a constant amount of
sunlight and are useful for imaging, spy, and weather satellites.
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Operational launchers - Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) and Geosynchronous Satellite Launch
Vehicle (GSLV) and Sounding Rockets.
Future launchers – GSLV MK-III, Reusable Launch Vehicle (RLV-TD), Scramjet Engine – TD.
1.4 PSLV
It is the3rd generation launch vehicle and first Indian launch vehicle to be equipped with liquid stages.
PSLV emerged as the reliable and versatile workhorse launch vehicle of India with consecutively successful
missions.
It successfully launched two spacecraft such as Chandrayaan-1 in 2008 and Mars Orbiter Spacecraft in 2013.
3 variations in PSLV - PSLV-G (General), PSLV-XL variants and PSLV-CA (Core Alone).
It has 4 stages in its operation to provide thrust in launching spacecraft to different orbits.
Stage I: It uses solid rocket motor that is augmented by 6 solid strap-on boosters. Strap on boosters are
used only in G and XL variation.
Stage II: It uses an Earth storable liquid rocket engine, known as the Vikas engine.
Stage III: It uses solid rocket motor that provides high thrust after the atmospheric phase of the launch.
Stage IV: It comprises two Earth storable liquid engines.
Capacity - 1,750 kg of payload to Sun-Synchronous Polar Orbits of 600 km altitude and to 1,425 kg of
payload to Geosynchronous and Geostationary orbits, like satellites from the IRNSS constellation.
PSLV launches in 2020/2019–PSLV-C48/RISAT-2BR1, PSLV-C47 / Cartosat-3, PSLV-C46/RISAT-2B,
PSLV-C45/EMISAT MISSION, PSLV - C44/Microsat, Kalamsat
1.5 GSLV
It is the 4th generation launch vehicle, a three-stage vehicle with four liquid strap-on boosters.
GSLV Mk II is the largest launch vehicle developed by India, which is currently in operation.
1. Stage I: It uses solid rocket motor with 4 liquid strap-ons.
2. Stage II: It uses liquid rocket engine (similar to vikas engine of PSLV stage II).
3. Stage III: It uses India‘s first cryogenic engine (CE-7.5) in the upper stage. It enabled the launching of
2000 kg of communication satellites.
Capacity - It can take up to 5000 kg of pay load to Low Earth Orbits, 2500 kg of payload to Geosynchronous
Transfer Orbit (GTO) which are primarily INSAT class of communication satellites.
GSLV Launches in 2018 – GSLV – F11/GSAT-7A and GSLV – F08/GSAT – 6A mission.
The next variant of GSLV is GSLV Mk III, with indigenous high thrust cryogenic engine.
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1.8 RLV-TD
Reusable Launch Vehicle – Technology Demonstrator (RLV-TD) is a fully reusable launch vehicle to enable
low cost access to space.
The configuration of RLV-TD is similar to that of an aircraft and combines the complexity of both launch
vehicles and aircraft.
The winged RLV-TD has been configured to act as a flying test bed to evaluate various technologies, namely,
hypersonic flight, autonomous landing and powered cruise flight.
In future, this vehicle will be scaled up to become the first stage of India‘s reusable two stage orbital launch
vehicle.
Objectives of RLV-TD - Hypersonic aero thermodynamic characterisation of wing body, Evaluation of
autonomous Navigation, Guidance and Control (NGC) schemes, Integrated flight management and Thermal
Protection System Evaluation
It was successfully flight tested in 2016 from Sriharikota.
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ISRO‘s Advanced Technology Vehicle (ATV), which is an advanced sounding rocket, was the solid rocket
booster used for test of Scramjet engines at supersonic conditions.
ATV is a two- stage solid launch vehicle capable of carrying Scramjet engines weighed 3277 kg at lift-off.
India is the fourth country (after USA, Russia and European Space Agency) to demonstrate the flight testing of
a Scramjet Engine.
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This capacity-building programme is in response to a request that the UN Office for Outer Space Affairs had
made to space-faring nations last year.
UNISPACE+50 - It is an event marking the 50th year of the first UN Conference on the Exploration and
Peaceful Uses of Outer Space.
Indian Missions
1.14 GSAT-30
It is a 3,357-kg satellite launched by Ariane-5 VA-251 vehicle from the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou
It will replace INSAT-4A which was launched in 2005.
The mission life is more than 15 years.
The high-power satellite is equipped with 12 normal C band and 12 Ku band transponders.
It provides Indian mainland and islands coverage in Ku-band and extended coverage in C-band covering Gulf
countries, a large number of Asian countries and Australia.
It will provide DTH television services, connectivity to VSATs (that support working of banks') ATMs, stock
exchange, television up linking and teleport services, digital satellite news gathering and e-governance
applications.
The satellite will also be used for bulk data transfer for a host of emerging telecommunication applications.
For this operation ISRO hired a foreign launcher as GSAT-30 is much heavier than the 2,000-kg lifting
capacity of its geostationary launch vehicle GSLV-MkII.
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NASA has one payload onboard called the Laser Retroreflector Array (LRA).
The „Terrain Mapping Camera-2‟(TMC-2) will map the lunar surface and help to prepare 3D maps of it.
The „Miniature Synthetic Aperture Radar‟(Mini SAR) will also map the surface of water-ice in the
South Pole and thickness of the lunar dust on the surface.
The „Dual Frequency Radio Science‟(DFRS) will study the density of the electrons in the moon‘s
ionosphere.
The orbiter has a high-resolution camera (OHRC) that ensures that the lander makes a safe touchdown on the
lunar surface by taking 3D images of the landing site.
The ‗Solar X-ray Monitor‟(XSM) measures the intensity of the solar rays and the outer most part of the
atmosphere or its corona.
CLASS (Chandrayaan 2 Large Area Soft X-ray Spectrometer) measures the light absorbed by the Moon and
will check for different metals that are present in its spectrum.
Thermo-physical property of the lunar surface and seismic activities will also be measured.
The orbiter will continue to orbit the Moon for a year, at an altitude of 100 kilometres.
The Rover which is 6-wheeled, AI-powered and the Lander are designed to work for only 14 days (1 lunar day).
China‟s mission - China landed a lander and rover on the Moon‘s far side (not facing the Earth).
This was the first time any landing had taken place on that side.
The Chinese mission, Chang‘e 4, was designed to function for three lunar days but has already entered its fifth
lunar night.
Geotail and its impact on Chandrayaan-2
Recently, ISRO tweeted that an instrument on Chandrayaan-2, CLASS, had detected charged particles
during the mission.
This happened during the orbiter‘s passage through the ‗Geotail‘.
The Geotail is a region in space that allows the best observations.
The region exists as a result of the interactions between the Sun and Earth.
The Sun emits the solar wind, which is a continuous stream of charged particles.
These particles are embedded in the extended magnetic field of the Sun.
Since the Earth has a magnetic field, it obstructs the solar wind plasma.
This interaction results in the formation of a magnetic envelope around Earth.
On the Earth side facing the Sun, the envelope is compressed into a region that is approximately 3 to 4 times
the Earth radius.
On the opposite side, the envelope is stretched into a long tail, which extends beyond the orbit of the Moon.
It is this tail that is called the Geotail.
Once every 29 days, the Moon traverses the geotail for about six days.
When Chandrayaan-2, which is orbiting the Moon, crosses the geotail, its instruments can study the properties
of the geotail.
It can helps to detect the presence of key elements like Na, Ca, Al, Si, Ti and Fe the lunar soil.
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PSLC C-44 Microsat-R and Kalamsat - 10cm cube communication nano-satellite weighing about
1.2kg designed by students
Kalamsat-V2
First satellite to use PS4 as an orbital platform, thus reducing space
satellites
debris
Microsat-R - 130-kg military imaging satellite
PSLV C-43 HysIS and 30 HysIS – India‘s first Hyper spectral Imaging Satellite
international co- Aim - Study the earth‘s surface in the visible, near infrared and
shortwave infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum
passenger satellites
PSLV C-41 IRNSS - 1I 8th satellite to join the NavIC navigation satellite constellation
ExseedSAT – 1 A CubeSat mission by the Indian private space company Exseed Space
Launched by SpaceX, a private aerospace company, from California
satellite launch pad.
First Indian Private entity satellite launched by SpaceX, in its Falcon9
rocket
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ISS is a joint project between fivl participating space agencies NASA (USA), Roscosmos (Russia), JAXA
(Japan), ESA (Europe), and CSA (Canada).
The Indian space station would be stationed at an altitude of 400 kilometres from Earth.
The newly planned Indian space station will conduct microgravity experiments in space where astronauts can
stay for 15-20 days.
This project would be an extension of the Gaganyaan mission, which intends to put two or three Indian
astronauts in space for a maximum of a week and is scheduled to be launched by August 2022.
1.22 Vyommitra
Vyommitra is ISRO‘s first woman half-humanoid astronaut.
It will simulate human functions before real astronauts in Gaganyaan crew take off.
It will be used for an unmanned flight of ISRO‘s GSLV III rocket (Gaganyaan Mission) in December 2020,
which, along with a second unmanned flight in July 2021.
ISRO will send the human-resembling model in a space capsule around the end of 2020 or early 2021 to study
how she and later real astronauts respond to living outside earth in controlled zero gravity conditions.
She can detect and give out warnings if environmental changes within the cabin get uncomfortable to
astronauts and change the air condition.
She can take up postures suited for launch and tasks and take commands.
It can also able to perform following functions
1. Replacing carbon dioxide canisters,
2. Operating switches,
3. Monitoring of the crew module,
4. Receiving voice commands,
5. Responding via speech (bilingual).
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1.23 Gaganyaan
Gaganyaan is the India‘s first Human Space Flight Programme set for 2022.
The programme will make India the fourth nation in the world to launch a Human Spaceflight Mission, only
after the USA, Russia and China.
It is being operating under a newly formed Centre, Human Space Flight Centre (HSFC).
It aims to send a three-member crew to space for a period of five to seven days.
Objectives of Gaganyaan Mission-
1. Enhance of science and technology levels in the country,
2. Serve as national project involving several institutes,
3. Inspire youth,
4. Develop technology for social benefits and
5. Improve international collaboration
6. Improve of industrial growth.
Critical Technologies for Human Space Flight (HSF)-
1. Orbital Module
2. Crew Escape System
3. Integration facility
4. Crew Module
5. Deep Space Network
6. Re-entry and Recovery system
ISRO has developed some critical technologies through demonstrations like Space Capsule Recovery
Experiment (SRE-2007), Crew module Atmospheric Reentry Experiment (CARE-2014) and Pad Abort Test
(2018).
The spacecraft will be placed in a low earth orbit of 300-400km.
GSLV Mk-III launch vehicle will be used to for the mission. It has the payload capacity of 4000 kg satellites in
Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (GTO) and 8000 kg payload to Low Earth Orbit.
The crew will be selected by Indian Air Force (IAF) and ISRO jointly after which they will undergo training for
two-three years.
Re-entry & Recovery tech - ISRO has already tested the GSLV Mk-III with experimental crew module.
It came back to Earth after being taken to an altitude of 126 km into space. This this known as Crew module
Atmospheric Re-entry Experiment (CARE).
Crew Escape System – It is an emergency escape measure to quickly pull the astronaut crew out to a safe
distance from launch vehicle during a launch abort.
Pad Abort test was conducted earlier to demonstrate this to ascertain the efficiency of crew escape system.
Life support -The Environmental Control & Life Support System (ECLSS) is meant for humans inside to live
comfortably.
It ensures that conditions inside the crew module are suitable for living.
The ECLSS -
i. maintains a steady cabin pressure and air composition
ii. removes carbon dioxide and other harmful gases
iii. controls temperature and humidity
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iv. manages parameters like fire detection and suppression, emergency support
v. takes care of food and water management
The crewed vehicle is planned to be launched on ISRO's GSLV Mk III in December 2021.
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It was meant to observe only the solar corona but with additional experiments, it can provide observations of
Sun's Photosphere (soft and hard X-ray), Chromosphere (UV) and corona (Visible and NIR).
The outer layers of the Sun, extending to thousands of km above the disc (photosphere) is termed as the
corona. It has a temperature of more than a million degree Kelvin which is much higher than the solar disc
temperature of around 6000K.
It will be launched into the halo orbit around the Lagrangian point 1 (L1) of the Sun-Earth system.
This orbit has the advantage of allowing continuous monitoring of the sun.
Lagrange Points
A Lagrange point is a location in space where the combined gravitational forces of two large bodies, such as
Earth and the sun or Earth and the moon, equal the centrifugal force felt by
a much smaller third body.
The interaction of the forces creates a point of equilibrium where a
spacecraft may be "parked" to make observations.
The first point, L1, lies between Earth and the sun and gets an
uninterrupted view of the sun and free from the occurrence of eclipses.
L2 with the Earth, moon and sun behind it, a spacecraft can get a clear view
of deep space and it has a protection for radiation field from sun.
The James Webb Space Telescope will move into L2 point in 2018.
The third Lagrange point, L3, lies behind the sun, opposite Earth's orbit.
For now, science has not found a use for this spot.
Points L4 and L5 are stable and lie along Earth's orbit at 60 degrees ahead of and behind Earth and dust and
asteroids tend to accumulate in these regions due to its stability.
Asteroids that surround the L4 and L5points are called Trojans and Earth‘s only known Trojan asteroid, 2010
TK7 is found in the region.
1.28 AstroSat
It is a space observatory launched by ISRO in 2015.
It was launched with a lift-off mass of about 1500 kg by PSLV-C30.
It is India‘s first dedicated multi wavelength space observatory.
Most other scientific satellites can observe only a narrow range of wavelength band.
But AstroSat enables the simultaneous multi-wavelength observations of various astronomical objects with a
single satellite.
It observes universe in the optical, Ultraviolet, low and high energy X-ray regions of the electromagnetic
spectrum.
The scientific objectives of ASTROSAT mission are:
1. To understand high energy processes in binary star systems containing neutron stars and black holes
2. Estimate magnetic fields of neutron stars
3. Study star birth regions and high energy processes in star systems lying beyond our galaxy
4. Detect new briefly bright X-ray sources in the sky
5. Perform a limited deep field survey of the Universe in the Ultraviolet region
The minimum useful life of the AstroSat mission is expected to be 5 years.
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It has been configured to carry out observation of physical features of mars and carry out limited study of
Martian atmosphere with following five payloads:
o Mars Colour Camera (MCC)
o Thermal Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (TIS)
o Methane Sensor for Mars (MSM)
o Mars Exospheric Neutral Composition Analyser (MENCA)
o Lyman Alpha Photometer (LAP)
It was launched by PSLV – C25 with lift off mass of 1337 Kg in Martian Orbit.
1.30 NISAR
NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar satellite (NISAR) is the world‘s most expensive earth imaging satellite.
It will be launched by 2020 and it will be the first satellite mission to use two different radar frequencies (L-
band and S-band).
The S-band is being built by ISRO and L-band by NASA.
It is expected that the NISAR satellite will be launched in 2021 from India using GSLV.
One of the main purposes of the mission is to observe Earth and establish a general pathway for future joint
missions for Mars exploration.
It will take weekly snapshots of earth that will provide time lapse images of the motion of tectonic plates, ice
sheets and changes in vegetation over land in agriculture and forests and natural hazards.
Global Missions
NASA
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The mission, which will take the first pictures of the top and bottom of the sun, was launched on an Atlas V
rocket.
It carries four in situ instruments to measure the space environment immediately around the spacecraft like
the sense of touch and Six remote-sensing imagers, which see the sun from afar.
The Solar Orbiter (called SolO) will face the sun at approximately 42 million kilometers from its surface.
The new spacecraft will use the gravity of Venus and Earth to swing itself out of the ecliptic plane, passing
inside the orbit of Mercury, and will be able to get a bird‘s eye view of the sun‘s poles for the first time.
In 1990, NASA and ESA had sent the Ulysses mission, which also passed over the sun‘s poles but at much
farther distances, and did not carry a camera.
Orbiter will take pictures using telescopes through a heat shield that is partly made of baked animal bones, to
help it withstand temperatures of up to 600 degree Celsius.
The Orbiter will help scientists understand the sun‘s dynamic behavior, and solve mysteries such as the
sunspot cycle, or why the star spews out high velocity charged particles through the solar system.
With more data on the global magnetic field of the star, scientists would be able to forecast space weather
events.
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This mission is part of NASA's Discovery Program for highly focused science missions that ask critical
questions in solar system science.
It is similar in design and will rely on proven technologies used on NASA's Mars Phoenix mission, and will
send a lander to the Martian surface to spend two years to investigate interiors of Mars.
Previous missions to Mars have investigated the surface history of the Red Planet by examining features like
canyons, volcanoes, rocks and soil.
Marsquake
NASA has recently recorded tremblings in Mars for the first time ever.
It appears to have come from inside the planet, as opposed to being caused by forces above the surface.
It was recorded by NASA‘s Insight lander and its specially designed seismometer picked up the fainted
trembles.
1.38 Curiosity
It is a rover deployed by NASA in its Mars Exploration Program, 2011 to assess whether Mars ever had an
environment able to support small life forms called microbes.
The rover will analyze samples scooped from the soil and drilled from rocks in order to detect chemical
building blocks of life (e.g., forms of carbon) on Mars and will assess what the Martian environment was like
in the past.
The rover captured mesas and buttes on mars geological layer called as Murray formation, which is formed
from the lakebed mud deposits.
Butte otherwise called as Murray Butte is an isolated hill with steep, flat top side and with often vertical sides.
Mesa is an elevated area that has wider top than its height, while Butte has a top that is narrower than
itsheight.
The rover has recently successfully collected the first rock samples on the red planet in over a year, using a
new way to drill rocks and extract powder from the target called ―Duluth‖.
High Methane Levels on Mars
High amounts of Methane in the air on Mars was rediscovered by Curiosity.
This lead to excitement whether this was an indication of life on the Red Planet.
On Earth, methane (CH4) is a naturally occurring gas.
Most of the methane on Earth is produced in biological processes.
However, methane can also be produced by abiotic processes as chemical reactions, found in rocks, springs
and aquifers.
Since many living organisms in Earth releases methane, the presence of methane in Mars is considered a
potential indicator of life.
Curiosity has an instrument called the Sample Analysis at Mars which is a laser spectrometer capable
of measuring atmospheric composition.
But it cannot definitively say whether the source of the methane is biological or geological.
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Mars is prone to dust storms due to its thin atmosphere and desertic conditions.
No response has been received from Opportunity since June 10, 2018amid a planet-encircling dust storm on
Mars.
NASA has declared that the mission is complete.
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Recent developments - Recently it is reported that the spacecraft will reach icy object nicknamed Ultima
Thule (TOO-lee).
Ultima Thule will be the farthest world ever explored by humankind, no spacecraft has visited anything so
primitive.
Pluto is barely in the Kuiper Belt, the so-called Twilight Zone Kuiper Belt - It is a ring of objects between
stretching beyond Neptune, Ultima Thule is in the Twilight Neptune and the edge of the solar system
Zone‘s heart.
full of dwarf planets, hundreds of thousands
The color of Ultima Thule is expected to be darker than coal,
burned by eons of cosmic rays, with a reddish hue. of icy rocks and comets.
1.44 OSIRIS-REx
The Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security-Regolith Explorer (OSIRIS-REx)
spacecraft will travel to a near-Earth asteroid, called Bennu.
It will bring sample back to Earth for study and help scientists investigate how planets formed and how life
began, as well as improve our understanding of asteroids that could impact Earth.
The aim of the mission is to collect a sample of regolith- the loose, soil-like material which covers the surface
of the asteroid.
It was launched in 2016 and it will return a sample to Earth in 2023.
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Its measurements will help scientists better understand the link between space weather and terrestrial
weather, and how the two interact in the ionosphere.
It is the region where strange and unique phenomena, such as the auroras and geomagnetic storms are
created.
1.47 BRUIE
Buyant Rover for Under-Ice Exploration (BRUIE) is a robot developed by NASA for underwater exploration in
extra-terrestrial, icy waters.
It will search for life in ocean worlds beyond Earth.
It could be used to explore Jupiter‘s moon Europa or Saturn‘s moon Enceladus.
As these moons are believed to have liquid water oceans beneath thick crusts of ice, they may be the most
promising locations in our solar system to search for evidence of extra-terrestrial life.
It will be rolling into Antarctica soon to perform driving upside down under sea ice, since they are the closest
Earth analog to the seas of an icy moon which makes them an ideal testing ground for it.
It uses buoyancy to remain anchored against the ice and is impervious to most currents.
NASA is already constructing the Europa Clipper orbiter, scheduled for launch in 2025 to study Jupiter's
moon Europa, laying the groundwork for a future mission that could search for life beneath the ice.
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1.49 MAVEN
The Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN) mission is part of NASA's Mars Scout program,
launched in 2013.
The mission will explore MARS‘s upper atmosphere, ionosphere and interactions with the sun and solar wind.
An important aspect of the MAVEN mission is studying how early Mars lost much of its atmosphere.
This atmospheric loss may have been partially responsible for Mars‘ transition from a planet capable of
supporting liquid surface water to the dry, desert world we know today.
It has avoided its head-on collision with phobos, the natural satellite of Mars in 2018.
1.51 TESS
Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is a planet hunter mission. It deploys a space telescope to search
for exoplanets (planets outside of our solar system) that could support life.
The spacecraft will be looking for a phenomenon known as a transit, where a planet passes in front of its star,
causing a periodic and regular dip in the star‘s brightness.
The principal goal is to detect small planets with bright host stars in the solar neighborhood.
It will survey 200,000 of the brightest stars near the sun to search for transiting exoplanets.
It will do an all-sky survey from an orbit between the Earth and the moon
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1.53 CubeSat
CubeSats are a class of research spacecraft called nanosatellites, which can serve purposes such as Earth
observation or amateur radio.
They are used to demonstrate spacecraft technologies that are targeted for use in small satellites.
They are built to standard dimensions of 10 cm x 10 cm x 11 cm unit and typically weigh less than 1.33 kg/unit.
They require Micropropulsion devices which use ultra-purified water as propulsive agent.
It uses Film-Evaporation MEMS Tunable Array (FEMTA) thrusters which uses capillaries small enough to
harness the microscopic properties of water.
The thrusters deliver precise low-thrust for scientific, commercial and military space applications.
It can be manoeuvred in space with tiny bursts of water vapour to perform tasks like high-resolution imaging
and internet services to disaster response, environmental monitoring and military surveillance.
This was the first landing ever accomplished in the outer Enceladus
solar system.
After 20 years in Space, NASA‘s Cassini Spacecraft has Enceladus is a small moon with an ocean
made its final death plunge in Saturn recently. of liquid water beneath its icy crust.
It is a well-planned demise to prevent any damage to Clouds of gas erupting out of Enceladus
Saturn‘s ocean bearing moons Titan and Enceladus. contain hydrogen.
1.55 Rosetta
The mission was launched in 2004 to land a probe on a comet.
It arrived in the Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in 2014. Comet 67P–It makes regular visits to
It is the first spacecraft to accompany a comet as it enters the the inner solar system, as it orbits the
inner solar system, as well as the first to attempt landing on a
comet. sun every 6.5 years between the orbits of
Earth and Jupiter.
The mission included the Philae lander, which made the first
touchdown on the comet but it did not stay down.
In 2016, it made a planned final plunge into its comet, ending its mission.
Mission Application
Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager (FOXSI) mission It is a sounding rocket that aims directly at Sun and search
for nanoflares using its X-ray vision.
Exploration Mission-1 (EM-1) - Orion Spacecraft Next-generation vehicle to carry astronauts to the Moon
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and on to Mars
Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) World‘s first mission devoted to studying rapidly spinning
neutron stars
Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) To understand the boundary of the Heliosphere
EcAMSat – E.coli Anti-Microbial Satellite Mission To investigate spaceflight effects on bacterial antibiotic
resistance and its genetic basis
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1.57 Galileo
Galileo is a navigation satellite program being developed by the European Union as a rival to the U.S. Global
Positioning System.
It was commissioned in 2003 and is due for completion by 2020.
It is a project of the European Commission and European space agency.
It consists of 24 satellites in which 22 are currently in orbit and it is likely to reach 30 in 2021.
It promises eventual real-time positioning to accuracy of one metre or less.
1.58 ExoMars
ExoMars is a joint space venture between European Space Agency and Russian space agency Roscosmos to
Mars.
The ExoMars programme comprises 2 missions.
The first mission was launched in 2016 and consists of the Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) and Schiaparelli, an entry,
descent and landing demonstrator module.
The second mission is planned to be launched in 2020 and comprises a rover and surface science platform.
The rover that will carry a drill and a suite of instruments dedicated to search for possible existence of life
beyond earth and geochemistry research.
It is likely to land on Mars‘ equator called Oxia Planum, which had housed a massive pool of water in the
prehistoric era.
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It is expected to be launched to the International Space Station (ISS) in a capsule on board a SpaceX rocket.
1.62 Tiangong-2
Tiangong-2 (―Heavenly Palace‖) is a Chinese Space Laboratory.
It is an experimental space station which carried out research and human operations in Low Earth Orbit
(LEO).
It was launched on September 2016 and it was has deorbited on July 19, 2019 spent over 1,000 days in orbit.
It was brought down to Earth in a controlled fashion and burned up over the South Pacific ocean by China.
It followed the Tiangong-1, China‘s first space station, which crashed into the southern Pacific Ocean on 2018.
It deploys to space the first-ever ‗Cold Atomic Fountain Clock‘ which has a higher precision than conventional
atomic clocks.
It detected 55 ‗gamma-ray bursts‘ by a device names POLAR installed on the spacecraft.
It also docked a micro-satellite that took high-resolution pictures of the connected space lab and Shenzhou-11
manned spacecraft.
1.63 Chang‟e 4
Chang'e 4 is a Chinese lunar exploration mission, which incorporates an orbiter, a robotic lander and rover
It is the world‘s mission to land on the dark side of the moon.
The moon is tidally locked Earth, rotating at the same rate that it orbits our planet, so the far side (Dark side)
is never visible from the Earth.
It will reach the far side of the Moon, not visible from the Earth, a feat no country has ever achieved.
It will explore the lunar surface in the south pole – Aitken basin, which is one of the largest known impact
craters in the solar system.
The probe has recently entered a planned orbit to prepare for the first ever soft landing on the far side of the
moon.
Chang'e-4 will follow China's successful Chang'e-3 mission which soft-landed on the visible side of the Moon
in 2013.
The vehicle is similar to Yutu, China‟s first lunar rover launched in 2013 along with Chang‘e 3.
1.65 MINERVA-II1
MIcro Nano Experimental Robot Vehicle for Asteroid (MINERVA) is the second-generation rover developed
by Japanese Space Agency.
It is the world‘s first man-made object to explore movement on an asteroid surface.
It recently landed on Asteroid Ryugu and the world's first rover to land on the surface of an Asteroid.
This is also the first time for autonomous movement and picture capture on an asteroid surface.
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It will collect a sample of the primitive world during its stay at Ryugu, to bring to Earth for laboratory analysis
Mission Application
Aeolus Satellite Part of the Copernicus project (EU + European Space Agency)
To track environmental damage and aid disaster relief operation
Advanced laser technology to track global winds and improve weather forecasts
World's first space mission to gather information on Earth's wind on a global scale.
Queqiao (Magpie Bridge) China – to set up a communication link between the Earth and a planned Chinese
lunar exploration mission to explore the Moon‘s mysterious far side
HY-1C satellite China – To improve understanding of maritime waters and climate change
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Falcon Heavy Reusable super heavy-lift launch vehicle designed and manufactured by SpaceX, a
private American aerospace manufacturer
2. PLANETARY SYSTEMS
2.2 Ploonet
When the moons of exoplanets break away from their own orbits, went rogue and acts like a planet, it is called
"Ploonet."
It gets its name from „Planet + moon = Ploonet‟.
As the exoplanets move inward toward their suns, the orbits of their moons are often disrupted.
So, the moon may run away from their exoplanets and could become 'Ploonets', according to new study
models.
This is because of the combined gravitational forces of the planet and the star.
This gravitational force would inject extra energy into the moon‘s orbit, pushing it farther from its planet until
eventually it escapes.
This process happens in every planetary system composed of a giant planet in a very close-in orbit.
As for Earth‘s own Moon, it is a potential ploonet.
It moves about 4cm farther away from Earth every year.
Going at this rate, it won‘t break away from the Earth‘s orbit for about next 5 billion years.
However, astronomers not yet confirmed the existence of a single exomoon, it just remains hypothetical in
research papers.
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17 of the new moons orbit the planet in the opposite, or retrograde, direction and 3 moons have prograde
orbits, circling in the same direction.
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It is located between Mars and Jupiter, and was discovered on November 11, 2006 by the Arizona based
telescope.
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Earth blocks the Sun‘s light from falling directly on the Moon so the only light the moon gets is reflected off of
Earth.
Earth's atmosphere scatters blue so only the red light gets reflected onto the Moon's surface and makes it look
red.
Wolf Moon is the name given by Native Americans to a full moon that appears in January.
So Super Blood Wolf Moon = Full Moon + Perigee + Lunar Eclipse + January
A lunar eclipse only takes place when there is a full Moon.
2.8 Mini-Moon
Astronomers have observed a small object orbiting Earth, which they have dubbed a ―mini-moon‖ or the
planet‘s ―second moon‖.
It is actually an asteroid, about the size of a car, with a diameter of about 1.9-3.5 m.
Unlike our permanent Moon, the mini-moon is temporary, it will eventually break free of Earth‘s orbit and go
off on its own way.
Dubbed 2020 CD3, the mini-moon was discovered by NASA-funded Catalina Sky Survey (CSS).
CSS previously discovered 2006 RH120, which orbited Earth for some time that year, before it escaped in
2007.
The Minor Planet Center of the International Astronomical Union acknowledged the discovery.
When an asteroid‘s orbit crosses Earth‘s orbit, it can sometimes be captured into the latter orbit, this is what
happened with 2020 CD3.
It is now orbiting at a distance farther from Earth, Such an asteroid is called a Temporarily Captured Object
(TCO).
The orbit of such objects is unstable and they have to contend with the gravitational influence of our
permanent Moon as well as that of the Sun.
Once caught in Earth‘s orbit, such objects usually remain for a few years before they break free and go into
independent orbit around the Sun.
2.6 Europa
Europa, a frozen moon around Jupiter, is believed to be one of the most habitable worlds in the solar system.
It was first imaged in detail by the NASA‘s Voyager 1 probe in 1979, revealing a surface almost devoid of large
craters.
Europa is also criss-crossed with long troughs, folds and ridges, potentially made of icebergs floating around
in melt-water or slush.
In 1990‘s The Galileo mission found evidence that it had a sub-surface liquid salt water ocean.
Recent studies show it may well be normal table salt (sodium chloride), just like on Earth.
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This has important implications for the potential existence of life in Europa‘s hidden depths.
Scientists believe that hydrothermal circulation within the ocean, possibly driven by hydrothermal vents might
naturally enrich the ocean in sodium chloride, via chemical reactions between the ocean and rock.
On Earth, hydrothermal vents are thought to be a source of life, such as bacteria.
Like our moon and Earth, Europa is tidally locked to Jupiter, meaning that it always presents the same side to
the giant planet.
Salt, specifically the sodium ions in table salt, is also crucial for a whole range of metabolic processes in plant
and animal life.
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2.9 K2-18b
„K2-18b‟ is an ‗exoplanet‘ discovered in 2015 by NASA‘s ‗Kepler spacecraft‘.
Now, scientists have found signatures of ‗Water vapour‘ in the atmosphere of K2-18b.
This makes it the only planet outside Solar system with temperatures and water vapour that can potentially
support life.
It is about 110 light years from Earth, and 8 times the mass of Earth, orbits a star.
It resides in a habitable zone, the region around a star in which liquid water could potentially pool on surface
of a rocky planet.
K2-18b is not ‗Earth 2.0‘ as it is significantly heavier and has a different atmospheric composition.
The researchers used data from the ‗Hubble Space Telescope‘ and analysed the K2-18b‘s atmosphere.
The results revealed the molecular signature of water vapour, indicating, presence of hydrogen and helium in
its atmosphere.
2.11 Sagittarius A
It is a supermassive black hole sits 26,000 light years away from Earth, near the ‗Galactic Centre‘ or the centre
of the ‗Milky Way‘.
Since the discovery of Sagittarius A 24 years ago, it has been fairly calm.
This year, however, Sagittarius A has shown unusual activity, and the area around it has been much brighter
than usual.
Reason for this unusual activity,
1. Sagittarius A may become hungrier and has been feeding on nearby matter at a faster rate, it is described
as a “Big feast”.
2. A black hole does not emit light by itself, but the matter that it consumes can be a source of light.
3. Sagittarius A could be growing faster than usual in size.
4. The current model that measures its level of brightness maybe inadequate and is in need of an update.
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2.13 Arrokoth
Ultima Thule, the farthest cosmic body ever visited by a spacecraft, has
been renamed Arrokoth, or ―sky‖ in the Native American language.
Arrokoth is icy rock, which orbits in the dark and frigid Kuiper Belt about
a billion miles beyond Pluto.
Arrokoth is an example of a ―cold classical object‖ which has remained
undisturbed since the solar system formed some 4.5 billion years ago.
It was surveyed by the NASA spaceship New Horizons in January 2019,
with images showing it consisted of two spheres stuck together in the
shape of a snowman.
The new official name, which was chosen by the New Horizons team and ratified by the International
Astronomical Union.
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The Visible Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS) on the Venus Express orbiter has measured the
amount of infrared light emitted from part of Venus‘ surface during its nighttime, shedding new light on
volcanism on the planet.
This allowed scientists to differentiate the fresh lava flows on the surface of Venus from the older ones.
Earlier, the ages of lava eruptions and volcanoes on Venus could not be identified because the alteration rate
of fresh lava was not well constrained.
The new research led by Universities Space Research Association (USRA) has used data from the European
Space Agency‘s (ESA‘s) Venus Express orbiter to confirm that the lava flows are recent and Venus could have
currently active volcanoes.
2.16 TRAPPIST-1
It is a system of seven Earth-size planets orbiting an ultra-cool dwarf star about 40 light-years away.
This is by far the largest collection of Earth-like planets in the habitable ‗Goldilocks‟ zone of a star.
Goldilocks represents a zone which is neither too close nor too far from a star, which raises the possibility of
liquid water being present on the surface.
Unlike earlier discoveries of exoplanets, all seven planets could possibly have liquid water.
Three of the planets have the greatest chance.
Since the initial discovery of three planets was made using the Chile-based Transiting Planets and
Planetesimals Small Telescope, the exoplanet system is called TRAPPIST-1.
The TRAPPIST-1 planets have lower densities than Earth.
In a new study, researchers found that the TRAPPIST-1 star is quite old: between 5.4 and 9.8 billion years.
Recent evidence from NASA‘s Hubble space telescope revealed that earth sized exoplanets in the Trappist-1
system may contain water.
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2.18 Oumuamua
Oumuamua is the first interstellar object known to enter our solar
system.
It accelerated faster away from the sun than expected. This has
created the notion that some kind of artificial sail (force of radiation
pressure that runs on sunlight) may have pushed it.
This artificial sunlight known as ―Light sail‖ may be responsible for
the excess acceleration of the object.
2.19 Farout
Astronomers have reported the discovery of the most distant body ever observed in the Solar System, at 120
astronomical units (AU) from the Sun.
This has led to the nickname ―Farout‖ for the
object, provisionally titled 2018 VG18.
Farout is also the first known Solar System
object that has been detected at a distance that
is more than 100 times farther than Earth is
from the Sun.
For context, the second-most distant observed
Solar System object is Eris, at about 96 AU.
Pluto is currently at about 34 AU.
1 AU is defined as the distance between the
Earth and the Sun.
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Its aim is to measure size of known transiting exoplanets and search for transits of exoplanets previously
discovered via radial velocity.
It is the first mission dedicated to searching for exoplanetary transits by performing ultra-high precision
photometry on bright stars already known to host planets.
The Mission objectives are,
i. Use ultra-high precision photometry to measure accurate sizes of a large sample of Earth to Neptune
sized planets,
ii. Seeks to measure light curves of hot Jupiters to see how energy is transported in planetary
atmospheres,
iii. Combine CHEOPS size measurements with existing planet masses to constrain their composition and
internal structures.
iv. Identify prime targets to search for the fingerprints of key molecules in the planets‘ atmospheres using
future observatories on Earth.
Ever since its launch CHEOPS satellite has been orbiting the Earth at an altitude of 700 kilometers (435
miles).
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The Japanese KAGRA detector is set to go online in 2019 and LIGO India set to join by 2024.
Previously, gravitational waves have been found using two U.S.-based detectors known as the Laser
Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO).
LIGO-India, or INDIGO, is a planned collaborative project between the LIGO Laboratory and the Indian
Initiative in Gravitational-wave Observations (IndIGO) to create a world-class gravitational-wave
detector in India.
A site in the Hingoli district (Maharashtra) has been selected.
Noble Prize for Physics - Rainer Weiss, Barry C. Barish‘s and Kip Thorne‘s were jointly awarded the Nobel
Prize for physics for their contribution to the LIGO-VIRGO project and its detection of gravitational waves.
3.5 SOFIA
SOFIA, the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, is the largest airborne observatory in the world.
It consists of an extensively modified Boeing aircraft carrying a
reflecting telescope with an effective diameter of 2.5 meters.
The observatory is based at NASA's Armstrong Flight Research
Center in Palmdale, California.
The project is implemented by NASA and German Aerospace
Center (DLR).
Many objects in space emit almost all their energy at infrared
wavelengths. Often, they are invisible when observed in
ordinary visible light.
Thus, SOFIA observes universe in infrared wavelengths to get the expanded views.
It is preparing for its 2018 campaign for observing Saturn‘s giant moon Titan.
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The gravitational field of a massive object will extend far into space, and cause light rays passing close to that
object to be bent and refocused somewhere else.
This phenomenon is ‗Gravitational lensing‘, simply put, ‗mass bends light‘.
The effect is analogous to that produced by a lens.
The more massive the object, the stronger its gravitational field and hence the greater the bending of light
rays.
It is just like using denser materials to make optical lenses results in a greater amount of refraction.
In effect, these are natural, cosmic telescopes, called gravitational lenses.
These large celestial objects will magnify the light from distant galaxies that are at or near the peak of star
formation.
The effect allows researchers to study the details of early galaxies too far away.
Gravitational lensing happens on all scales,
1. The gravitational field of galaxies and clusters of galaxies can lens light.
2. On smaller objects such as stars and planets.
3. Even the mass of our own bodies will lens light passing near us a tiny bit, although the effect is too small
to ever measure.
The Milky Way today forms the equivalent of one Sun every year, but in the past, that rate was up to 100 times
greater.
NASA now plans to look billions of years into the past in order to understand how our Sun formed.
The programme is called ‗Targeting Extremely Magnified Panchromatic Lensed Arcs and Their Extended Star
Formation‘, or TEMPLATES.
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It is the same process by which black holes are formed except that here the star is not massive enough to
produce a black hole.
Supergiant stars are the largest stars in the universe. They can be thousands of times bigger than our Sunand
have a mass up to 100 times greater.
The largest known supergiant star, VY CanisMajoris, is up to 2,100 times the size of theSun.
Binary stars are two stars orbiting a common center of mass.
3.16 SPHEREx
NASA will launch a new space telescope in 2023 called SPHEREx.
It would provide a glimpse of the first moments in the history of the universe, and explore how common are
the ingredients for life in our galaxy‘s planetary system.
SPHEREx is the Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization and Ices Explorer.
NASA plans it as a two-year mission.
It will survey the sky in optical as well as near-infrared light which serves as a powerful tool for answering
cosmic questions.
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4. DEFENSE
Artillery
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It features an automatic rocket preparing and launching system and range of up to 90km.
It was developed by Russia in the early 1980s and entered service with the Russian Army in 1988.
In December 2005, India placed an order for an initial 38 systems and deliveries began in May 2007.
A tender for mobility vehicles to carry this Smerch system and missiles developed by DRDO, was opened by
the Indian government earlier in 2015.
For the first time, an Indian vehicle manufacturer (Ashok Leyland) has acquired the tender and it will deliver
heavy duty, high mobility vehicles for the above stated purpose.
Missiles
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It is an Artillery Missile System capable of striking into enemy territory up to a range of 75 kilometres with
high precision.
The Pinaka MK-II Rocket is modified as a missile by integrating with the Navigation, Control and Guidance
System.
The Navigation system of the missile is also aided by the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS).
It is to improve the end accuracy and enhance the range.
The mission achieved all the objectives including enhancing the range, accuracy and sub-system functionality.
4.10 Prithvi – II
India has recently test-fired Prithvi-II missile off the Integrated Test Range at Chandipur, Odisha.
Prithvi II is an indigenously developed surface-to-surface nuclear-capable missile.
It is a single-stage liquid fuelled twin engine missile with a short-range of 350km.
It is s capable of carrying 500 to 1000 kg of warheads.
It was inducted into the Indian Defence in 2003.
It is the first one to have been developed by the DRDO under the Integrated Guided Missile Development
Programme.
Prithvi – III is a short-range, road-mobile, ballistic missile and its model is a departure from Prithvi I, II as it
employs a two-stage, solid propellant motor.
4.11 Brahmos
It is a medium-range supersonic cruise missile that can be launched from submarine, ships, aircraft, or land.
The missile has been jointly developed by India‘s Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO)
and Russia‘s NPOM. The name Brahmos has been taken as a combination of the two rivers Brahmaputra and
Moskva.
It is the fastest supersonic cruise missile in the world.
Its range was initially capped at 290 km as per obligations of the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR).
Since India‘s entry into MTCR, the range has been extended to 450 km and the plan is to increase it to 600km.
It also provides a much-desired capability to strike from large stand-off ranges with pinpoint accuracy by day
or night and in all weather conditions.
4.12 Pralay
It is a newly developed surface-to-surface tactical missile.
It is a derivative of Prithvi Defence Vehicle (PDV) exo-atmospheric interceptor which can destroy enemy
weapons at high altitudes.
It has a payload of 1 tonne and it has the capacity to strike targets 350 km away.
It can travel up to 500 km if the payload is halved.
It is propelled by solid-fuel rocket.
It can fly faster than the conventional missiles in its class and can evade ballistic missile defence system.
It will be launched from its own canister-based transport erector launcher.
4.13 Nirbhay
It is India‘s first indigenously designed and developed Long Range Sub-Sonic Cruise Missile.
It can be deployed from multiple platforms.
It was successfully test fired from the Integrated Test Range (ITR), Chandipur, Odisha.
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The missile has the capability to loiter and cruise at 0.7 Mach, at altitudes as low as 100 m.
The Mach number is defined as the ratio of the speed of the aircraft to the speed of sound i.e Mach 1 means the
velocity is equal to the speed of sound.
When the velocity exceeds the speed of sound is called supersonic and if it is less than the speed of sound it is
called subsonic.
4.14 HELINA
It is an acronym for ―Helicopter Launched Nag‖ missile.
Nag is a third generation Anti-Tank guided missile indigenously developed under ―Integrated Guided
Missile Development Programme (IGMDP)‖ of DRDO.
Anti-Tank Guided Missiles are primarily designed to hit and destroy heavily armored military vehicles.
Helina is the helicopter launch variant of Nag, that can be fired from Dhruv advanced light helicopter and
HAL Rudra attack helicopter.
It is a heavier and longer-range version of the vehicle mounted Nag missile with a 7-km range.
Typically, a land version of Nag missile has a range of only 4 km.
The missile is guided by ―infrared imaging seeker‖, that homes in on the target‘s heat signature.
IGMDP involves the development of Agni, Akash, Trishul, Prithvi and Nag missiles.
4.16 Agni V
It was successfully test fired from a canister on a road mobile launcher from Dr. Abdul Kalam Island, off the
coast of Odisha.
It is India‘s longest-range ballistic missile which will be inducted into the nuclear arsenal soon.
It is an Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) with a range of over 5,000 km and can reach most parts of
China.
It is powered by three stage solid fuelled missiles.
It can carry a payload of 1.5 tonnes.
It is a part of Integrated Guided Missile Development Program (IGMDP).
Earlier variants of the Agni family of long-range missiles have already been deployed.
4.17 Barak-8
It is a missile system jointly developed by DRDO India and M/s Israel Aerospace Industry (IAI).
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It includes Long Range Surface-to-Air Missile (LR-SAM) and Medium Range Surface-to-Air Missile (MR-
SAM).
LR-SAM is the Ship Launch Version and Project MR-SAM is the Land Launch Version of Barak-08 Missile
system.
MR-SAM detects incoming enemy aircraft while they are well over 100 km away and destroys them at range
upto 70 km.
LR-SAM has got long range engagement capability to penetrate in deep water/land to intercept all types of
aerial targets (like Subsonic & Supersonic Missiles, Fighter Aircraft, Maritime Patrolling Aircraft (MPA),
Helicopter and Sea Skimming Missiles.
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Aircrafts
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The Radar systems in the helicopter will enhance the capability of the IAF in providing integrated combat
aviation cover.
It is day/night, all weather capable, and have high agility and survivability against battle damage.
These are easily maintainable even in field conditions, and are capable of prolonged operations in tropical and
desert regions.
Recent Developments -The deal for 6 Apache attack helicopters for the Indian Army is likely to be signed
early next year.
These are in addition to 22 Apaches being inducted by the Indian Air Force (IAF) which are expected to be
delivered by 2020.
In 2017, the Defence Acquisition Council approved the purchase of six Apache attack helicopters from the U.S.
for the Army.
It will replace the ageing Russian Mi-35 attack helicopters in service.
4.24 Tejas
It is an indigenous fighter aircraft inducted in to Indian Airforce in the year 2016.
It has recently commenced its operation.
It is designed by the Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA)
and Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL).
It is a single-seat, single-jet engine, multirole light fighter.
It is the smallest and lightest multi-role supersonic fighter
aircraft in its class.
It can fire Air to Air Missiles, carry bombs and Precision
Guided ammunition.
It has its root in the Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) programme, which began in the 1980s to replace the ageing
MiG-21 fighters.
MiG-21 fighters are purchased from Russia in 1961.\
Recent Developments - The naval variant of the LCA Tejas has made a first successful ―Arrested landing‖
test.
―Arrested landing‖ means to rapidly decelerate an aircraft as it lands.
An "arrested landing" on the deck of an aircraft carrier is a feat achieved byonly a handful of fighter jets
developed in the US, Russia, the UK, France and China.
The aircraft has to land on a 100-metre runaway on an aircraft carrier (a normal LCA lands on a one-kilometre
runway).
The Tejas will need to replicate this, out at sea when it attempts to land on the deck of India's only operational
aircraft carrier, INS Vikramaditya.
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Warning Systems
4.32 NETRA
It is the first indigenously built Airborne Early Warning and Control System (AEW&CS) developed by DRDO.
It is light-weight autonomous UAV for long range surveillance and reconnaissance operations.
This radar system is also mounted on Embraer aircraft which gives 240-degree coverage of airspace.
It helps to detect and track aircraft, missiles, ships and vehicles.
The other countries which have developed AEW&C are United States, Russia and Israel.
For the first time, an IL-78 refueller aircraft has recently carried out air-to-air refuelling of the Embraer
aircraft.
Air-to-air refuelling allows the aircraft to stay airborne much beyond their limits, allowing better exploitation
of capabilities.
4.33 Swathi
It is a Weapon Locating Radar, developed by DRDO‘s Electronics
& Radar Development Establishment.
It provides fast, automatic and accurate location of all enemy
weapons like mortars, shells and rockets firing within in its
effective zone of coverage.
It simultaneously handles multiples projectiles fired from different
weapons at different locations.
The system is capable of adjusting the fire of our own artillery
weapon too.
Thus WLR has two roles to perform i.e. Weapon Location Mode
for enemy Artillery and Direction of Own artillery Fire (DOOAF) Mode for our own Artillery.
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Programs
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It is indigenously developed by the Ordnance Factories Board, a public sector undertaking MIDHANI along
with BARC.
It is named after nuclear physicist Dr. Homi J. Bhabha.
The jacket weighs just 6.6 kg in comparison to the 17-kg jackets in use.
It can shield from AK-47 (7.62 mm hard steel bullets), SLR and INSAS (5.56 mm) weaponry.
It is made using extremely hard boron carbide ceramics, carbon nano-tubes and composite polymer.
It is available in 3 variants as per the requirement of the armed forces.
BARC has transferred the technology to Mishra Dhatu Nigam, Hyderabad, for its large-scale production.
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Submarines
4.41 Submarines
Attack Submarine
Chakra (Akula II) INS Chakra
(SSN)
INS Sindhughosh
INS Sindhudhvaj
INS Sindhuraj
INS Sindhuvir
Sindhughosh Attack Submarine INS Sindhuratna
INS Sindhukesari
INS Sindhukirti
INS Sindhuvijay
INS Sindhurashtra
INS Shishumar
INS Shankush
Shishumar Attack Submarine
INS Shalki
INS Shankul
INS Kalvari
Kalvari Attack Submarine INS Khanderi
INS Karanj
*INS Chakra and INS Arihant are Nuclear Powered, whereas the rest are Diesel Powered.
4.43 Project 28
It is a class of anti-submarine warfare corvettes currently in service with the Indian Navy.
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They are the first anti-submarine warfare stealth corvettes to be built in India.
Three of the four corvettes, INS Kamorta and INS Kadmatt, INS Kiltan were commissioned in 2014, 2016 and
2017 respectively.
INS Kavaratti is expected to be commisioned by May 2019.
4.44 Project-15B
The Project 15B/ Visakhapatnam Class destroyer is a class of guided missile destroyers.
It comprises of four ships - Visakhapatnam, Mormugao, Paradip and Porbandar all of which are being built by
the Mazagon Dock Limited (MDL), for the Indian Navy.
Visakhapatnam and Mormugao are already launched.
Project 15B is an improved variant of the Kolkata-class destroyers (Project 15A), with enhanced stealth
characteristics and a high degree of automation.
Project 15A includes INS Kolkata, INS Kochi and INS Chennai.
Similarly Project 15A is a follow-on of the Project 15 i.e Delhi-class destroyers, which include INS Delhi, INS
Mumbai and INS Mysore.
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It made India the only country apart from the five permanent members of the UN Security Council to operate
a homemade nuclear U-boat.
Nuclear submarines are those that are powered by onboard nuclear reactors whereas conventional submarines
generate energy by burning diesel, which requires air.
Its induction also marked the completion of India‘s nuclear triad.
A nuclear triad refers to the nuclear weapons delivery via land, air and sea i.e. land-based intercontinental
ballistic missiles (ICBMs), strategic bombers, and submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs).
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In recent years, U.S. and British military officials have warned that Russian submarines have been spotted
close to the cables.
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Project-17A is a deviation from the existing Shivalik class of frigates and it incorporate new design concepts for
improved survivability, sea keeping, stealth and ship manoeuvrability.
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4.62 Shaurya
Shaurya is an Indian Coast Guard ship, recently commissioned in Goa.
It is the fifth in the series of six 105-metre offshore patrol vessels (OPVs).
It features integrated bridge system, integrated machinery control system, power management system and
high-power external fire fighting system.
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It is widely used as a „Within Visual Range‟(WVR) air dominance missile with a range of over 25km.
It can also be fired at targets behind its aircraft.
The Indian Air Force (IAF) is looking to adopt ASRAAM across its fighter fleet.
This plan is to bridge the missile gap between the IAF and the Pakistan Air Force (PAF), which displayed an
edge during the 27 February dogfight.
The missile was shortlisted through a tender and MBDA was working with Hindustan Aeronautics Limited
(HAL) on the integration.
Exercises
4.69 Varuna
It is an Indo-French Joint Naval Exercise.
It is held either in the Indian Ocean or Mediterranean sea with the aim of improving Indo-French
coordination.
The Indian Navy is represented by
1) Aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya,
2) destroyer INS Mumbai,
3) the Teg-class frigate,
4) INS Tarkash,
5) the Shishumar-class submarine INS Shankul, and
6) the Deepak-class fleet tanker INS Deepak.
It is the largest ever joint exercise undertaken by the two navies.
The exercise was conducted in two phases with first phase being held in Goa.
The second sea phase is scheduled to be held at the end of May in Djibouti, located on the Horn of Africa.
The exercise underscores the shared interests and commitment of both nations in promoting maritime
security.
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Shakti-2019 - Exercise Shakti is a series of joint military exercise between India and France.
It was commenced in the year 2011 and it is a biennial exercise.
It is conducted alternately in India and France.
This year exercise is going to be organised in the State of Rajasthan.
It will focus on Counter Terrorism operations in backdrop of semi-desert terrain under United Nations
Mandate.
Dustlik-2019 – It is the first ever India-Uzbekistan joint military exercise.
It will be organised in Tashkent and focus on Counter terrorism.
SCOJtEx-2019 – India‘s NDRF is hosting the Shanghai Cooperation Organization(SCO) Joint Exercise on
Urban Earthquake Search and Rescue.
It is to rehearse the disaster response mechanism, share knowledge, experience and technology for mutual
coordination.
Samudra Shakti - It is a bilateral naval exercise between India and Indonesia.
It is being held in Visakhapatnam.
INS Kamorta, an Anti-Submarine Warfare Corvette participates in the exercise from Indian Side.
The joint exercises include manoeuvres, Surface Warfare exercises, Air Defence exercises, Weapon firing
drills, Helicopter Operations and Boarding Operations.
Ex - Roar of the Sea –It is conducted between the Indian Navy and Qatari Emiri Naval Forces.
It would strengthen cooperation and enhance interoperability between the two navies.
This Bilateral Maritime Exercise between the two navies would strengthen the robust defence co-operation
between the two countries.
MILAN 2020 - It is a biennial naval exercise held under the command Indian Navy.
The Last (10th) edition was held in 2018 and the next (2020) is going to be held in Vishakhapatnam.
In its forthcoming edition, 41 countries have been invited for the participation.
USA and Russia have been invited while Pakistan and China are not.
The areas of cooperation include Capacity Building, Marine Domain Awareness, Training, Hydrography,
Technical Assistance, Operational Exercise etc.
Exercise HIM VIJAY–It is a routine military exercise conducted to validate operational capabilities of our
combat formations.
It is to test mobility, communication and coordination of such huge body of fast-moving troops in difficult
terrain.
Three Battle Groups, , each comprising around 4000 soldiers, are participating which will include troop
mobilisation, mountain assault and air assault.
Air force and Army helicopters will be transferring troops and equipment at the terrain of upto 15,000 ft.
This year, it was taken place in Arunachal Pradesh.
Ex-SURYA KIRAN–It is a Joint military exercise between India and Nepal will be conducted in Nepal.
It is an annual event which is conducted alternatively in Nepal and India.
The aim of this exercise is to conduct a Battalion level combined training between Indian Army and Nepal
Army to increase interoperability in jungle warfare and counter terrorist operations in mountainous terrain,
humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, medical and environmental conservation including aviation
aspects.
Ex- Tiger Triumph - It is the maiden India US joint Tri services Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster
Relief (HADR) Exercise.
Indian Naval ships Jalashwa, Airavat and Sandhayak, would be participating in the exercise.
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5. HEALTH
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4. Ageing,
5. Rapid unplanned urbanization.
There are primarily 5 types of Non-communicable diseases -
1. Cancer,
2. Chronic respiratory disease,
3. Stroke
4. Cardiovascular diseases
5. Diabetes, which are responsible for a majority of morbidity and mortality in the country.
Mental health and injuries also have a considerable burden.
NCDs cause 61% of deaths in India states WHO report
Cardiovascular diseases are at the top, in 2016 a staggering 28.1% of all deaths in India were caused by heart
conditions.
Also, India has the highest number of diabetes cases in the world, with 72 million reported in 2017.
Punjab, Tamil Nadu and Kerala, all wealthy states, were found to have some of the highest rates of heart
disease in the country.
Public health is a State subject,
National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases
and Stroke (NPCDCS) under the National Health Mission (NHM) is aneffort by Central
Government which supplements State Governments effort.
The objectives of the programme include health promotion activities and opportunistic screening for common
NCDs including cancer.
Affordable Medicines and Reliable Implants for Treatment (AMRIT) Deendayal outlets have been
opened at 159 Institutions/Hospitals.
It‘s objective is to make available Cancer and Cardiovascular Diseases drugs and implants at discounted prices
to the patients.
Jan Aushadhi stores are set up by Department of Pharmaceuticals to provide generic medicines at
affordable prices.
Chandigarh hosted the World NCD Congress in November 2017, spotlighting the impact of NCDs both in
India and on the global stage.
India has shown commitment towards Preventing Non-communicable Diseases as it became the first country
to adopt the WHO‘s Global Monitoring Framework on Non-communicable Diseases.
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They will receive an incentive of Re 1 per pack sold and a free pack of napkins every month for her own
personal use.
A range of IEC (Information Education and Communication) material has been developed around MHS.
It is a 360-degree approach to create awareness about safe and hygienic menstrual health practices.
It includes audio, video and reading materials for adolescent girls.
MHS is a part of Rashtriya Kishor Swasthya Karyakram, which is to ensure holistic development of
adolescent population.
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Most epidemics and emergencies do not gain public attention or fulfil the criteria to be a PHEIC.
5.9 e-Cigarettes
The Central government has directed all states and Union Territories to not allow the manufacture, sale and
advertisement of e-cigarettes and other Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS).
Electronic cigarettes or e-cigarettes, are devices that do not burn or use tobacco leaves but instead vaporise a
solution, which a user then inhales.
The main constituents of the solution, in addition to nicotine, are propylene glycol (with or without glycerol
and flavouring agents).
ENDS are devices that heat a solution to create an aerosol, which also frequently contains flavours, usually
dissolved into propylene glycolor and glycerin.
A number of metals, including lead, chromium and nickel, and chemicals like formaldehyde have been found
in aerosols of some ENDS.
ENDS are not approved as NRTs (nicotine-replacement therapies) under the Drugs and Cosmetics Act and
rules made thereunder.
According to Global Tobacco Epidemic 2017 report by the WHO, the governemnts of 30 countries like
Mauritius, Australia, Singapore etc have already banned ENDS.
Diseases in News
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„SA 14-14-2‟ vaccine become the most widely used vaccine in endemic countries, and it was prequalified by
WHO.
Since the recent outbreak in Assam, all 27 districts of Assam were covered under the JE vaccination campaign
for those aged between 1 to 15 years.
Migratory birds along with pigs in the community play an important role in the transmission of JE from one
area to another.
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Studies have revealed that a particular kind of fruit bat, Pteropus spp, was most likely the source of human
infection in 2018.
Research suggested that this particular strain might have been circulating in the local bat population.
The newly detected case in Kerala is believed to have actually been a result of intensified preventive and
containment efforts after last year‘s outbreak.
The increased awareness and vigilance in the community has helped in early detection this time.
Elsewhere in India - The first outbreak was in 2001 in Siliguri, West Bengal.
More than 30 people were hospitalised with suspected infection then.
Another outbreak happened in 2007 in Nadia of West Bengal, with over 30 cases of fever with acute
respiratory distress and/or neurological symptoms.
Notably, five of them turned out to be fatal.
5.13 Covid-19
The World Health Organization (WHO) has named the new coronavirus disease as ‗Covid-19‘.
The new name is taken from the words "corona", "virus" and "disease", with 2019 representing the year when
it emerged.
The WHO wanted to avoid stigmatizing a country or particular group, so it chose a name that did not refer to a
geographical location, an animal, an individual or a group of people.
The WHO, in consultation with the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations (FAO), has identified best practices for naming new human diseases.
These best practices apply to a new disease:
That is an infection, syndrome, or disease of humans;
That has never been recognised before in humans;
That has potential public health impact; and
Where no disease name is yet established in common usage
Names that are assigned by the WHO may or may not be approved by the International Classification of
Diseases (ICD) at a later stage.
The ICD, which is also managed by the WHO, provides a final standard name for each human disease
according to standard guidelines that are aimed at reducing the negative impact from names while balancing
science, communication and policy.
Coronavirus – They are a large family of viruses that cause illness ranging from the common cold to more
severe diseases such as Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS-CoV) and Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome (SARS-CoV).
A novel coronavirus (nCoV) is a new strain that has not been previously identified in humans.
Coronaviruses are zoonotic, meaning they are transmitted between animals and people.
Detailed investigations found that SARS-CoV was transmitted from civet cats to humans and MERS-CoV from
dromedary camels to humans.
Several known coronaviruses are circulating in animals that have not yet infected humans.
Coronaviruses are named for the crown-like spikes that protrude from their surfaces, resembling the sun‘s
corona.
Coronaviruses are among a large number of viruses that are common in people and many animals.
The new virus, first detected in China, is believed to have originated in bats.
While antibiotics don‘t work against viruses, researchers are testing drugs that could disrupt viral proteins and
stop the infection.
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SARS was also caused by a type of coronavirus (SARS-CoV) and is believed to be an animal virus, possibly
transmitted from bats to civet cats to human beings.
This virus first infected human beings in the Guangdong province of Southern China in 2002 and the region is
still considered a potential zone of the re-emergence of the SARS CoV.
The epidemic affected 26 countries and resulted in more than 8,000 cases in 2003.
SARS is transmitted from person to person, and the symptoms include fever, malaise, headache, myalgia,
diarrhea and shivering.
According to the WHO, fever is the most frequently reported symptom, and cough, shortness of breath and
diarrhea follow in the first or second week of illness.
Other countries where the SARS CoV spread during the epidemic include Hong Kong, Canada, Chinese Taipei,
Singapore and Vietnam.
5.16 Diphtheria
Diphtheria is an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Corynebacterium diphtheria.
It primarily infects the throat and upper airways and produces a toxin affecting other organs.
The bacteria produce a toxin because they themselves are infected by a certain type of virus called a phage.
The toxin causes a membrane of dead tissue to build up over the throat and tonsils, making breathing and
swallowing difficult.
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Rotavac 5D Vaccine
Hyderabad based Bharat Bio-Tech, an international biotechnology company, has recently unveiled advanced
version of rotavirus vaccine Rotavac 5D.
It is the oral rotavirus vaccine to tackle viral diarrhoea.
It has been developed with close coordination with the Department of Biotechnology.
The current Rotavac vaccine, also manufactured by Bharat Biotech, requires to be stored at -20-degreeCelsius
same as oral polio vaccine.
The newer Rotavac 5D will, however require between two to eight degrees celsius storage temperature, which
is the normal refrigeration temperature.
Rotavac 5D will have reduction in dosage from 2.5 to 0.5ml.
The vaccine is waiting for prequalification from WHO to supply across the world.
5.19 Hepatitis C
WHO has listed viral hepatitis as a major public health problem throughout the world and particularly in India
Hepatitis is an inflammation of the liver caused by blood borne Hepatitis Virus.
There are 5 main hepatitis viruses, referred to as types A, B, C, D and E.
It has the same mode of transmission as HIV, spreading through blood, injecting drugs, blood transfusion and
sexual activity, and from mother to child during pregnancy.
Hepatitis A is closely associated with unsafe water or food, inadequate sanitation and poor personal hygiene.
Unlike hepatitis B and C, hepatitis A infection does not cause chronic liver disease and is rarely fatal.
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is mostly transmitted through exposure to infective blood and it can cause both acute
and chronic hepatitis.
Acute HCV infection is usually asymptomatic (persons do not exhibit symptoms)and is only very rarely
associated with life-threatening disease.
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HCV can also be transmitted sexually and can be passed from an infected mother to her baby, but it is not
spread through breast milk, food, water or by casual contact.
Hepatitis A & E virus are responsible for sporadic infections and the epidemics of acute viral hepatitis.
Hepatitis B & C virus predominantly spread through the parental route and are notorious for causing chronic
hepatitis.
According to WHO Hepatitis is preventable and treatable but remains an acute public health challenge
globally and in the Southeast Asia region.
Currently, there is no vaccine for hepatitis C; except Hepatitis C, all other hepatitis viruses have safe and
effective vaccination to prevent them.
Note: Hepatitis B is included in India‘s Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP).
HCV is an important public health issue in India.
In Uttar Pradesh, Bijnor district, Pahuli village has emerged as a hotspot of hepatitis C infection.
Union Health Ministry‘s National Programme for Control of Viral Hepatitis for 2018-19, for the next three
years, hopes to screen the vulnerable population and provide free treatment where needed.
The National Hepatitis Policy will translate into better surveillance and detection of water and blood-borne
hepatitis viral infections in various regions.
5.21 Measles
Measles is a highly contagious viral disease.
It remains an important cause of death among young children globally, despite the availability of a safe and
effective vaccine.
Also called German Measles, Rubella is a contagious, generally mild viral infection that occurs most often in
children and young adults
Measles is transmitted via droplets from the nose, mouth or throat of infected persons.
Severe measles is more likely among poorly nourished young children, especially those with insufficient
vitamin A, or whose immune systems have been weakened by HIV/AIDS or other diseases.
The most serious complications include blindness, encephalitis (an infection that causes brain swelling),
severe diarrhea and related dehydration, and severe respiratory infections such as pneumonia.
Under the Global Vaccine Action Plan, measles and rubella are targeted for elimination in five WHO Regions
by 2020.
India, as part of the global initiative, has targeted elimination of measles and control of rubella by 2020.
Recently India has stepped in to help the Maldives tackle a recent outbreak of measles.
The Indian government‘s initiative comes even as the two countries implement the Memorandum of
Understanding on Health cooperation — signed during PM Narendra Modi‘s visit to Male in June 2019.
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5.23 Polio
• Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by a virus.
• It invades the nervous system and can cause total paralysis (Acute flaccid Paralysis) in a matter of hours.
• The virus is transmitted by person-to-person spread mainly through the faecal-oral route or less frequently, by
a common vehicle (for example, contaminated water or food) and multiplies in the intestine.
• Initial symptoms are fever, fatigue, headache, vomiting, stiffness of the neck and pain in the limbs.
• There is no cure for polio, it can only be prevented.
• Polio mainly affects children under 5 years of age. Polio vaccine, given multiple times, can protect a child for
life.
• There are 3 strains of wild poliovirus (type 1, type 2, and type 3).
• P2 was eradicated globally in 1999. The last case due to type-2 wild poliovirus globally was reported from
Aligarh in India in 1999.
• India attained a polio-free status in 2014 after successfully Elimination and Eradication
eliminating the wild P1 and P3 strains.
• India eliminated the type-2 strain in 2016, and the type-2 Elimination means stopping the
containing poliovirus vaccine (ToPV) was phased out in transmission of a disease in a specific
April 2016. geographic area or country, but not
• Thus, Children born after April 2016 in India have no worldwide.
immunity to type-2 polio virus. Disease eradication is the permanent
• Recently, Traces of polio type-2 virus were found in some reduction of a disease to zero cases
batches of oral polio vaccine (OPV) manufactured by a through deliberate measures such as
Ghaziabad-based pharmaceutical company. vaccines.
• No case of type 3 has been found since the last reported Once a disease has been eradicated,
case in Nigeria in November 2012. intervention measures are no longer
needed.
• Today, only 3 countries in the world have never stopped
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Influenza is known to kill 6.5 lakh people every year, especially young children, elderly, pregnant women or
those with vulnerable immune systems.
Only the ‗Influenza A virus‘ is divided into subtypes, based on two proteins on the surface of the virus,
1. Hemagglutinin (H) and Neuraminidase (N)
2. Hemagglutinin has 18 further subtypes while Epidemiological Terms to know
3. Neuraminidase has 11.
Endemic - A disease that exists
4. They are named from H1 to H18 and N1 to N11 in a permanently in a particular
sequential system. geographical region or population.
Humans can be infected with avian, swine and other Epidemic - An infectious disease
zoonotic influenza viruses. spreads rapidly to many people at about
1. Avian influenza subtypes - A(H5N1), A(H7N9) and the same time.
A(H9N2). Pandemic - An epidemic spread
2. Swine influenza subtypesn- A(H1N1), A(H1N2) and throughout the world.
A(H3N2). Outbreak - Refers to the number of
Novel strains of the H1N1 virus have appeared in 1918, cases (disease) that exceeds what would
1957, 1968 and most recently in 2009. be expected.
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It mostly affects adults in their most productive years. However, all age groups are at risk.
People who are infected with HIV are 20 to 30 times more likely to develop active TB
8 countries accounted for two thirds of the new TB cases: India,China,Indonesia, the Philippines, Pakistan,
Nigeria, Bangladesh and South Africa.
India has set its own target of eliminating TB by 2025.
Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is a form of TB caused by bacteria that do not respond to the most
powerful first-line anti-TB drugs (isoniazid and rifampicin).
MDR-TB is treatable and curable by using second-line drugs (bedquiline and delamanid).
Latent TB Infection - Persons with LTBI are those who harbor the TB-causing bacteria within, where it can
lie dormant.
In other words, it is a state of persistent immune response to stimulation by Mycobacterium tuberculosis
antigens without evidence of clinically manifested active TB.
The WHO lays emphasis on a specific strategy to tackle latent TB but only in high- and upper middle-income
countries with a low incidence of the disease.
According to a WHO report, approximately 10% of people with LTBI will develop TB, with the majority of
them getting it within the first five years of infection.
LTBI can often be tackled by maintaining good health and observing coughing and sneezing etiquette.
Recent Developments - The anti-tuberculosis drug Pretomanid was recently approved by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration (FDA).
This will be a game changer for treating people with extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) and multidrug-
resistant TB (MDR-TB) drugs.
Pretomanid is only the third drug in the last 4 decades to get FDA approval.
The all-oral, three-drug regimen of bedaquiline, pretomanid, and linezolid (BPaL) had a 90% cure rate in
a phase III trial in South Africa involving 109 participants.
In contrast, the current treatment success rate for XDR-TB and MDR-TB is about 34% and 55%, respectively.
5.32 NIKSHAY
It is a web enabled application, which facilitates monitoring of universal access to TB patient‘s data by all
concerned stakeholders.
It has been developed jointly by the Central TB Division of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and
National Informatics Centre (NIC).
Two objectives –
i. To create database of all TB patients including Multi-Drug Resistant cases across the country,
ii. To use this database for monitoring and research purposes at all levels so that TB can be eradicated
from India in an effective manner.
The government launched the NikshayPoshan Yojana, a direct benefit transfer scheme, to provide nutritional
support to TB patients.
Under the scheme, TB patients receive ₹ 500 per month for the entire duration of treatment.
According to the recent Tuberculosis India Report 2019 released by the Govt of India, the estimated TB
incidence in India stands at 27 lakh.
Report Highlights - TB burden in India is highest in Uttar Pradesh, followed by Maharashtra and
Rajasthan, Gujarat and MP.
The number of HIV-infected people who go on to develop Tuberculosis (TB) is increasing in India.
TB is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality among People Living with HIV (PLHIV).
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In 2018, the Revised National Tuberculosis Programme (RNTBP) was able to achieve notification by 21.5 lakh
persons, which is an increase of 16% as compared to 2017.
5.33 Salmonella
Indian MDH sambar masala were recalled from retail stores in US after tests by the US-FDA showed
positive for ‗Salmonella‘.
MDH is a top Indian cooking brand which is selling various spice mixes that are key to Indian cooking.
Salmonella is a group of „bacteria‟ that can cause food-borne illnesses known as Salmonellosis.
It is commonly found in the intestines of humans and animals.
It can also be found on raw meats, poultry, eggs and in unpasteurised milk.
It causesan illness if ‗live Salmonellabacteria‘ enters the body.
The bacteria can attach to the cells lining the intestines where they produce toxins and attack the intestinal
cells.
According to estimates by the US ‗Centers for Disease Control and Prevention‘ (CDC),
1. Salmonella causes 1.2 million illnesses and about 450 deaths in the US every year.
2. In a majority of these cases, food is the source of the illness.
Individuals who develop salmonellosis may show symptoms such as nausea, diarrhoea, fever and abdominal
cramps.
Usually, the illness lasts for 4-7 days, and most people recover without treatment.
In some cases the diarrhoea is severe and there is risk of it spreading from the intestines to other parts of the
body.
WHO identifies ‗Salmonella‘ as one of four key global causes of diarrhoeal diseases.
‗Salmonella bacteria‘ are widely distributed in domestic and wild animals.
They are prevalent in food animals such as poultry, pigs, and cattle, as well as in pets, including cats, dogs and
birds.
‗Salmonellosis‘ in humans is generally contracted through the consumption of contaminated food of animal
origin.
It also pass through other foods, including green vegetables contaminated by manure.
Person-to-person transmission can also occur through the faecal-oral route
5.34 Bluetongue
It is a non-contagious, viral disease affecting domestic and wild ruminants primarily sheep and including
cattle, goats, buffalo, antelope, deer, elk and camels.
It is transmitted by insects, particularly biting midges of the Culicoides species.
The virus which causes this disease belongs to the member of the Reoviridae family.
It is a disease listed under the OIE Terrestrial Animal Health Code and it must be reported to the World
Organisation for Animal Health.
It has significant distribution in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America and several islands in the
tropics and subtropics, where culicoides species is present.
Without the insect vector, the disease cannot spread from animal to animal.
Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) has released diagnostic kits Bluetongue sandwich ELISA
(sELISA) and the Japanese Encephalitis lgM ELISA for the control of Swine and Detection of Antigen.
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5.36 EEHV
Elephant Endotheliotropic Herpesvirus (EEHV) is a rare viral disease that causes fatal disease in young Asian
Elephants.
When it is triggered, the elephant dies of massive internal bleeding and symptoms which are hardly visible.
Some elephants show symptoms such as reduced appetite, nasal discharge and swollen glands.
The disease is usually fatal, with a short course of 28-35 hours.
It is lethal for young elephants between the ages of 1 and 12.
There is no true cure for herpesviruses in animals or in humans.
If a young elephant dies before reproducing, it affects the population of the species in the concerned
geography.
It has killed five elephants in Nandan Kanan Zoo &Chandaka forest in Odisha.
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encephalitis virus… (and which) are transmitted primarily by mosquitoes and (are) pathogenic in their
vertebrate hosts‖.
Unlike some other alphaviruses, Yada Yada does not pose a threat to human beings.
The virus was detected in mosquitoes trapped as part of the Victorian Arbovirus Disease Control Programme
in Encephalitis Virus Surveillance traps set up overnight in three locations in Victoria, Australia, for seven
weeks in late 2016, the researchers reported.
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5.45 Leprosy
Leprosy, also known as Hansen‘s disease, is a bacterial disease.
It affects skin and nerves which can lead to physical deformity and disability if left untreated.
It is not hereditary and completely curable, as opposite to general public views on leprosy.
It is only mildly infectious (i.e) more than 85% of cases are non-infectious and over 95% of the population has
a natural immunity to the disease.
Leprosy colonies in the country still faces stigma and government‘s attention towards it is also going down.
This is mainly because of WHO declaration of the elimination of leprosy as a public-health concern in India in
2005.
This has diluted the international funding and reduced attention and made life difficult for the people living in
the colonies.
5.46 Typhoid
Typhoid is an infection caused by the bacterium Salmonella typhimurium (S. typhi).
The bacterium lives in the intestines and bloodstream of humans.
S. typhi enters through the mouth and spends 1 to 3 weeks in the intestine. After this, it makes its way through
the intestinal wall and into the bloodstream and finally spreads into other tissues and organs.
It spreads between individuals by direct contact with the feces of an infected person.
It infects humans due to contaminated food and beverages.
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5.49 Chikungunya
It is a viral disease transmitted to humans by infected mosquitoes.
It causes fever and severe joint pain. Other symptoms include muscle pain, headache, nausea, fatigue and
rash.
The disease shares some clinical signs with dengue and zika, and can be misdiagnosed in areas where they are
common.
There is no cure for the disease. Treatment is focused on relieving the symptoms.
The proximity of mosquito breeding sites to human habitation is a significant risk factor for chikungunya.
The disease mostly occurs in Africa, Asia and the Indian subcontinent. However a major outbreak in 2015
affected several countries of the Region of the Americas.
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5.50 Diabetes
Diabetes mellitus (DM) - Commonly referred to as diabetes, is a group of metabolic disorders in which there
are high blood sugar levels over a prolonged period.
Most common types of Diabetes Mellitus are as follows
Type 2 diabetes - A chronic condition that affects the way the body processes blood sugar (glucose).
Type 1 diabetes - A chronic condition in which the pancreas produces little or no insulin.
Prediabetes - A condition in which blood sugar is high, but not high enough to be type 2 diabetes.
Gestational diabetes - A form of high blood sugar affecting pregnant women.
Diabetes insipidus - It occurs when the body can't regulate how it handles fluids.
The condition is caused by a hormonal abnormality and isn't related to diabetes.
In addition to extreme thirst and heavy urination, other symptoms may include getting up at night to urinate,
or bed-wetting.
Depending on the form of the disorder, treatments might include hormone therapy, a low-salt diet and
drinking more water.
5.51 Fluorosis
It is a slow, progressive, crippling disease which affects every organ, tissue and cell in the body.
According to WHO, the fluoride concentration in drinking water should not exceed 1.5mg/l.
Thus, fluorosis is caused by excessive exposure to fluoride, beyond a concentration of 1.5 mg/l.
It adversely affects the foetal cerebral function and neurotransmitters. Reduced intelligence in children is
associated with exposure to high fluoride levels.
Dental fluorosis is a defect in the tooth enamel caused by excessive fluoride consumption, is not treatable and
the strains are permanent.
Skeletal fluorosis is developed by the disturbance of calcium metabolism in the formation of bones in the
body. It results in the softening and weakening of bones, resulting in deformities.
The main sources of fluoride in groundwater are the rocks such as charnockite, quartzite, pegamatite, laterite
etc.
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India and China are the largest producers of antibiotics and contributes for 80 per cent of total antibiotics
production globally.
Due to the rising global concern UN also declared Nov 13-19 as World Antibiotic Resistance Week.
5.58 Deworming
Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) conducts deworming drive twice a year.
Deworming is a process to kill worms commonly tape, round and hook worm, that infest bodies of children
below 18 years of age.
As per the guidelines, children aged below two years are given 200 gm of Albendazole tablet, a drug to treat
parasitic worm infestation, and school-going children are administered 400 mg tablets.
The Albendazole tablet paralyses the muscles of these worms, the worm loses its grip of intestinal tract and is
flushed out of the human body.
A worm takes six months to mature and start sucking, therefore the exercise is carried out biannually.
Deworming has no serious side effects, but it can cause nausea and vomiting if a child has worms.
The medicine disrupts the worms which leads to uneasiness in the stomach.
Significance - Parasitic worms and their larvae are generally found in contaminated food and water.
In slums children walk bare feet and they frequently contract worms.
The worm first enters the blood circulation system and its larvae land up in the larynx, from where it finally
reaches the gastrointestinal tract.
The hook, round and tapeworm grow by sucking blood from its host in this case the human body.
Loss of blood leads to a drop-in haemoglobin level and causes anaemia, thus deworming kills these worms and
helps prevent anaemia.
The National Family Health Survey-3 data suggests anaemia is widely prevalent in all age groups.
Its prevalence is 56% among adolescent girls (aged 15-19) and 70 per cent among children below five years.
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It said FDCs are "unsafe" and "irrational" for consumption, posing health risks.
Court - On pharma companies challenging the ban, the matter was taken to the Supreme Court.
Drug makers argued that the statutory bodies on drug regulations were not consulted before the ban.
Eventually, the Supreme Court referred the matter to the Drug Technical Advisory Board (DTAB).
It directed the DTAB to make a fresh review of the issue with fixed-dose combination drugs.8
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ICD is a unique code for diseases, injuries that helps health professionals to share health information across
the globe.
It is also used by national health programme managers, health insurers whose reimbursements depend on
ICD coding.
The latest edition ICD – 11 provides significant improvements on previous versions in coding structure and
electronic tooling.
This will allow health care professionals to more easily and completely record conditions.
ICD-11 will be presented at the World Health Assembly in May 2019 for adoption by Member States.
It will come into effect on 1 January 2022.
New Additions in ICD-11 – It includes new separate chapters including traditional medicine and sexual
health which was previously categorized in mental health conditions.
Gaming disorder has been added to the section on addictive disorders
The codes relating to antimicrobial resistance are more closely in line with the Global Antimicrobial
Resistance Surveillance System (GLASS).
5.66 Lorcaserin
Lorcaserin (brandname Belviq or Belviq XR) is a weight-loss drug.
Lorcaserin has been withdrawn from the U.S. market after caution by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
because of cancer risk.
The agency also said that health care professionals should stop prescribing and dispensing the drug to
patients.
Following this Indian doctors have also cautioned against the use of the drug.
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Reports
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Key Findings - India has registered an improved sex ratio from 933 in 2001 to 943 in 2011.
In rural areas the sex ratio has increased from 946 to 949 and in urban areas from 900 to 929.
Kerala has recorded the highest sex ratio in respect of total population (1,084), rural population (1,078) and
urban (1,091).
The lowest sex ratio in rural areas has been recorded in Chandigarh (690).
India also shows a decline in birth and death rates.
Non-communicable diseases dominating over communicable in the total disease burden of the country.
The estimated birth rate reduced from 25.8 in 2000 to 20.4 in 2016 while the death rate declined from 8.5 to
6.4 per 1,000 population over the same period.
The total fertility rate (average number of children that will be born to a woman during her lifetime) in 12
States has fallen below two children per woman and 9 States have reached replacement levels of 2.1 and above.
Delhi, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal have the lowest fertility rate among other States.
6. BIO-TECHNOLOGY
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1. Embryonic Stem Cell - Embryos formed during the blastocyst phase of embryological development.
2. Adult stem cells – Exist throughout the body after embryonic development and are found inside of
different types of tissue such as the brain, bone marrow, blood, blood vessels, skeletal muscles, skin, and
the liver
The capacity to differentiate into specialized cell types and be able to give rise to any mature cell type is
referred to as potency.
When a stem cell divides, each new cell has the potential either to remain a stem cell or become another type
of cell with a more specialized function, such as a muscle cell, a red blood cell, or a brain cell.
Totipotent stem cells can differentiate into embryonic and extra embryonic cell types. These cells are
produced from the fusion of an egg and sperm cell and can construct a complete, viable organism.
The only totipotent cells are the fertilized egg and the cells produced by the first few divisions of the fertilized
egg are also totipotent.
Pluripotent stem cells are the descendants of totipotent cells and can differentiate into nearly all cells, i.e.
cells derived from any of the three germ layers.
These are true stem cells, with the potential to make any differentiated cell in the body. Embryonic Stem
Cells come under this category.
Multipotent stem cells can differentiate into a number of cells, but only those of a closely related family of
cells (i.e) it can only differentiate into a limited number of types.
Eg. The bone marrow contains multipotent stem cells that give rise to all the cells of the blood but not to other
types of cells.
Oligopotent stem cells can differentiate into only a few cells, such as lymphoid or myeloid stem cells.
Unipotent cells can produce only one cell type, their own, but have the property of self-renewal, which
distinguishes them from non-stem cells.
Such Unipotent cells include muscle stem cells.
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The option of sharing such IPRs should be indicated in the informed consent form which must be procured
before the commencement of the research.
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out and dropped into a healthy donor egg that has had its own chromosomes removed.
The resulting embryo now has DNA from both parents, as usual, plus mitochondrial DNA from the donor.
Concerns - The procedure has been seen as controversial because any offspring from such a procedure will
then have DNA from three parents.
However, mitochondrial DNA is separate from core DNA in cells. Thus, there will be no impact on the
personality or looks of the offspring from the third DNA set.
This comes as a move to prevent passage of incurable genetic diseases from mothers to offsprings.
There are concerns on the other hand that parents would misuse the technique to get "genetically modified"
babies.
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Antibody molecules are typically Y-shaped, with a binding site on each arm of the Y.
It is produced by plasma cells (B-cells).
When an individual B cell recognises a specific pathogen-derived "antigen" molecule, it can proliferate and
develop into plasma cells that secrete large amounts of antibody capable of binding to the antigen and fending
off the infection.
There are five classes of antibodies, each having a different function. They are IgG, IgA, IgM, IgD, and IgE.
The region of the antigen that interacts with the antibodies is called epitopes.
The variable region of the antibody that specially binds to an epitope is called paratope.
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In the past, Punjab Basmati has faced rejection due to detection of residue of such pesticides which are not
permissible in Europe, US and other countries.
So, the Punjab government restricted 9 pesticides, which are,
Acephate, Carbendazim, Thiamethoxam, Triazofos, Tricyclazole, Buprofezin, Carbofuron, Propiconazole and
Thiophanate Methyl.
The use of these restricted pesticides makes the input cost go up Rs 2000 to Rs 4000 per season, with
pesticide companies making a huge profit.
Basmati is grown during a period (in July) when naturally there is no pest attack on the crop during the initial
stage.
But farmers in Punjab are known to use pesticides as a preventive measure which is not recommended.
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FSSAI has banned calcium carbide under the ―Prevention of Food Adulteration (PFA) Act, 1954‖.
To distinguish the artificially ripened fruit,
1. They will have uniform skin colour in fruits like tomato, mango, papaya, and in the case of banana,
2. The fruit will be yellow while the stem will be dark green.
3. If the fruits are available before season, it could mean they are artificially ripened.
Washing and peeling the fruits before eating can minimise the risks of calcium carbide.
6.15 LRRK2
Leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) is a kinase enzyme that protects the body against viral and bacterial
infections by triggering inflammation like swelling, redness, heat and pain.
According to a recent study, this enhanced inflammation can lead to collateral damage to the body.
Inflammation caused by mutation in a gene can raise the risk of Parkinson‘s and Crohn‘s diseases as well as
leprosy.
Leprosy caused by infections characterised by lesions in the nerve endings of the skin.
LRRK2, which causes excessive inflammation to defend body against a type of mycobacterium infects
peripheral nerves, is thought to be behind leprosy.
The findings are also important for ongoing clinical trials of Parkinson‘s drugs that can reduce excessive
LRRK2 activity.
However, total absence of LRRK2 function can make people more prone to infections.
6.16 IndiGen
It is a programme managed by the CSIR for a free mapping of whole genomes of a person.
CSIR-Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (IGIB) and the CSIR-Centre for Cellular and Molecular
Biology (CCMB) are part of this.
The objectives of this programme are,
i. To test if it‘s possible to rapidly and reliably scan several genomes and advise people on health risks
that are manifest in their gene and,
ii. Understand the variation and frequency of certain genes that are known to be linked to disease.
A genetic test usually involves analysing only a portion of the genome that‘s known to contain aberrant genes
linked to disease.
A whole genome sequencing is more involved, expensive and generally attempted only for research purposes.
The human genome has about 3.2 billion base pairs.
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Rice is naturally low in the pigment beta-carotene, which the body uses to make Vitamin A.
Golden rice contains this, which is the reason for its golden colour.
Now, Bangladesh could be on the verge of becoming the first country to approve plantation of this variety.
In Bangladesh, over 21 per cent of the children have vitamin A deficiency.
The Golden Rice that is being reviewed in Bangladesh is developed by the Philippines-based International
Rice Research Institute.
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The next step would be obtaining the genomes and the venom gland genes from the other three of the ―big
four‖ and the deadly African species.
However, there is a very long way to go from genomes to effective anti-snake venoms.
6.20 POLYCRACK
POLYCRACK is world‘s first patented heterogeneous catalytic process, which converts multiple feedstock into
hydrocarbon liquid fuels, gas, carbon and water.
Polycrack Plant can be fed with all types of Plastic, Petroleum sludge, Un-segregated MSW (Municipal Solid
Waste) with moisture up to 50%, E–Waste, Automobile fluff, Organic waste including bamboo, garden waste
etc., and Jatropha fruit and palm bunch.
The process is a closed loop system and does not emit any hazardous pollutants into the atmosphere.
The combustible, non-condensed gases are re-used for providing energy to the entire system and thus, the
only emission comes from the combustion of gaseous fuels.
Pre-segregation of waste is not required to reform the waste, It has high tolerance to moisture hence drying of
waste is not required.
This process will produce energy in the form of Light Diesel Oil which is used to light furnaces.
Indian Railways commissions first Waste to Energy Plant based on POLYCRACK technology in Bhubaneswar.
The capacity of this Waste to Energy Plant is 500 Kg waste per day.
All types of waste including plastic and e-waste will be converted to Light Diesel Oil, which is used to light
furnaces.
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The adulteration was mainly on account of low fat or low SNF (Solid Non-Fat) or both.
Aflatoxin-M1 is more dominant in processed milk than raw milk, which is life threatening, usually through
damage to liver.
It comes in the milk through feed and fodder that are currently not regulated in the country
Tamil Nadu, Delhi and Kerala were top three States where Aflatoxin residue was found the most.
India is the world‘s largest producer of milk with the total estimated milk production in the country was 176.35
million tonnes during 2017-18.
6.26 MicroRNAs
Researchers from National Centre for Biological Sciences, Bengaluru, have discovered how small molecules
called microRNAs are made in plants.
This finding makes it much easier for studying processes in plants.
MicroRNAs are small molecules, about 21 nucleotides long, and help in controlling the levels of proteins in the
cell.
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All growth and development in plants are regulated at various levels in the cell, and mediated by proteins
In order to decrease the level of a particular protein in specific cells, the microRNAs destroy the messenger
RNA molecules that help with the production of that specific protein in the cell.
The microRNA molecules do this by cutting down that particular messenger RNA thereby destroying it.
This process is called the silencing of the messenger RNA.
The microRNA that achieve this silencing are evolutionarily conserved – that is, they are found in all flowering
plants, whether they are mosses or roses.
Similarly, the best way to study the effect of a gene in the DNA is to silence or ―knockout‖ the gene.
Knocking out a gene does not mean removing the entire gene.
In knocking out processes, those RNA that induce the gene to produce proteins are destroyed or their levels
are reduced by the microRNA as described earlier.
7. NUCLEAR TECHNOLOGY
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Efforts are currently on to enlarge the present Thorium related R&D work to a bigger scale towards
development of technologies for Thorium based reactors.
Narora, UP PHWR
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The NPCIL admitted that computer systems at the Kudankulam nuclear power station had been infected with
malware since early September 2019.
The NPCIL infection is said to be caused by Dtrack.
Dtrack is a Trojan virus that creates backdoors into computer networks.
This was originally developed and commonly used by North Korean hackers with state backing.
However, there are many variations of Dtrack, and the code may have been adapted by another group.
Kudankulam is high on the list of such targets because it is both part of the nuclear programme, as well as the
power grid.
The Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) claims to be aware of these vulnerabilities.
It is also reported to have issued advisories in many instances.
However, its scope is limited as it is the responsibility of the organisation owning the asset to protect it.
The linking of all the regional grids to the national grid makes it easier to supply power to any region on
demand.
However, it also makes the entire infrastructure more vulnerable to contagion from cyber-attacks.
The government has been trying to set up a system for cyber-protection of infrastructure.
The National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre (NCIIPC) is proposed to be the
coordinator.
Dedicated sectoral CERTs, such as CERT-Thermal-NTPC and CERT-Transmission-POWERGRID would be
responsible for guarding power assets.
However, the government has to address the bureaucratic hassles in assigning the responsibility.
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7.7 Kovvada
Kovvada is a new nuclear plant to be set up in the State of Andhra Pradesh.
It is a proposed light water nuclear reactor in Srikakulam District.
Recently, the land acquired for the construction of the nuclear power plant was handed over to Nuclear Power
Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL).
8. INNOVATIONS
8.1 Optoelectronics
Optoelectronics is the study and application of electronic devices and systems that source, detect and control
light, usually considered a sub-field of photonics.
In this context, light often includes invisible forms of radiation such as gamma rays, X-rays, ultraviolet and
infrared, in addition to visible light.
Materials such as tungsten diselenide (WSe2) and molybdenum diselenide are being studied keenly for their
opto-electronic properties.
A key property of these materials is photoluminescence, in which the material absorbs light and re-emits it as
a spectrum.
Photoluminescence properties can be used in various devices such as quantum LEDs which can be used in
communication and computation.
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8.5 5G Technology
Essentially, 5G is a set of technical ground rules.
They define the workings of a cellular network, including the radio frequencies used and how various
components like computer chips and antennas handle radio signals and exchange data.
Speed - The speed depends on where one is, and which wireless services is used.
Qualcomm, the wireless chipmaker, said it had demonstrated peak 5G download speeds of 4.5 gigabits a
second.
However, it predicts initial median speeds of about 1.4 gigabits.
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In other words, it would be roughly 20 times faster than the current 4G experience.
E.g. downloading a typical movie at the median speeds cited by Qualcomm would take 17 seconds with 5G,
compared with 6 minutes for 4G
The speeds will be particularly noticeable in higher-quality streaming video.
Latency - There is another kind of speed, a lag known as latency, that may become even more important with
5G.
The response is not exactly immediate when issuing a command now on a smartphone, such as starting a web
search.
A lag of 50 to several hundred milliseconds is
common, partly because signals often must pass
between different carrier switching centers.
5G, which uses newer networking technology,
was designed to reduce this latency down to a
few milliseconds.
Reliability - 5G is also designed to deliver
signals more reliably than earlier cellular
networks.
[Networks nowfrequently drop bits of data that are not essential for tasks like watching movies on a phone.]
This change could bring many benefits, notably in fields such as virtual reality.
The highest-quality VR applications now typically require bulky headsets that are connected by wire to nearby
personal computers that generate 3-D images.
With 5G, that would be off-loaded wirelessly to other machines, freeing users to move and making it easier to
develop goggles the size of eyeglasses.
In the related field of augmented reality, a smartphone camera could be pointed at a football game to see both
live video on the display and superimposed player statistics or other data.
Besides these, 5G‘s impact extends to medicine and other fields that increasingly rely on high-speed
connections.
Officials in the United States and China see 5G networks as a competitive edge.
The faster networks could help spread the use of artificial intelligence and other cutting-edge technologies
too.
8.6 Hyperloop
It is the futuristic transportation system concept, proposed by Elon Musk.
It envisages pods or capsules travelling at high speeds through low-pressure tubes erected on columns or
tunnelled underground.
The system is fully autonomous and sealed, so no driver-related error is anticipated.
In a sealed environment with almost no air resistance, the pods are expected to reach very high speeds.
It uses magnetic levitation, and is propelled by a proprietary electric propulsion system.
Its motion will not involve contact, so the vehicle will be virtually noiseless.
It is so far only a concept with no resemblance to any public transport system known to man.
Hyperloop Transportation Technologies (HTT) has signed an agreement with the Andhra Pradesh government
to set up first Hyperloop transport system in India.
The system will connect the city centres of Amravati and Vijayawada.
The technology uses a high-speed train that promises travel at twice the speed of a commercial aircraft.
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Hyperloop consists of a low pressure tube with capsules that are transported at both low and high speeds
throughout the length of the tube.
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It was launched in partnership with Indian industries under the flagship programme ―New Millennium Indian
Technology Leadership Initiative (NMITLI)‖.
A fuel cell is an electrochemical device which directly converts the chemical energy of a fuel into electrical
energy.
In a fuel cell, the fuel and the oxidant, which is usually oxygen or air, are supplied continuously from an
external source and power is also drawn continuously.
In a conventional battery, on the other hand, the fuel and the oxidant are contained within and when these
reactants are consumed the battery must be replaced or recharged.
A high temperature fuel cell using a solid oxide electrolyte, and operated at temperatures above 700°C, is a
highly efficient energy conversion device utilizing primarily gaseous fuels like H 2and CO.
It can also be operated in the reverse manner as a high temperature steam electrolyser to produce hydrogen.
It would replace Diesel Generating (DG) sets and help reduce India‘s dependence on crude oil.
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8.14 Bio-Rock
Bio rock is the name given to the substance formed by electro accumulation of minerals dissolved in seawater
on steel structures that are lowered onto the sea bed.
The technology works by passing a small amount of electrical current through electrodes in the water.
When a positively charged anode and negatively charged cathode are placed on the sea floor, with an electric
current flowing between them, calcium ions combine with carbonate ions and adhere to the structure
(cathode).
This results in calcium carbonate formation; Coral larvae adhere to the CaCO3 and grow quickly.
Fragments of broken corals are tied to the bio rock structure, where they are able to grow at least four to six
times faster than their actual growth as they need not spend their energy in building their own calcium
carbonate skeletons.
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The Zoological Survey of India (ZSI), with help from Gujarat‘s forest department, is attempting for the first
time a process to restore coral reefs.
Under the plan a biorock structure or mineral accretion technology was installed one nautical mile off the
Mithapur coast in the Gulf of Kachchh, it will use solar panels that float on the surface as a power source.
8.15 NEON
Among the most-discussed new concepts at the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas this
year was NEON.
The first project of Samsung‘s Star Labs, NEONs are being called the world‘s first artificial humans.
They look and behave like real humans, and could one day develop memories and emotions though from
behind a 4K display.
NEONs are computationally created virtual humans — the word derives from NEO (new) + humaN.
For now the virtual humans can show emotions when manually controlled by their creators.
But the idea is for NEONs to become intelligent enough to be fully autonomous, showing emotions, learning
skills, creating memories, and being intelligent on their own
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At present, lithium-ion batteries are not manufactured in India and therefore the country has to depend on
imports from Japan or China.
But there is a concern about the property of flammability of lithium-ion battery.
Lithium-ion batteries are all about the movement of lithium ions.
The ions move one way when the battery charges (when it's absorbing power); they move the opposite way
when the battery discharges (when it's supplying power).
Lithium ion batteries are more reliable than older technologies such as nickel-cadmium.
Nickel batteries appear to become harder to charge unless they're discharged fully first, it is not the case with
lithium ion batteries.
Lithium-ion batteries don't contain cadmium, a toxic, heavy metal.
It has high energy density i.e. it store more energy per unit of weight when compare to other kind of batteries.
But it still stores a hundred times less energy dense than gasoline (which contains 12,700 Wh/kg by mass or
8760 Wh/L volume).
It has a much lower energy density i.e it store less energy per unit of weight.
It is used in every modern cellphone, laptop, tablet, and most other rechargeable gadgets.
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8.23 Bitcoins
Crypto-currency is a digital currency that allows transacting parties to remain anonymous while confirming
the transaction is valid.
Bitcoins are cryptocurrencies introduced in 2008.
It is the most commonly used crypto currency across the globe.
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It does not belong to any nation, so that there is no regulatory authority for bitcoins.
It is underpinned by a peer-to-peer computer network made up of its users‘ machines called block chain.
Bitcoins are mathematically generated as the computers in this network solve various mathematical tasks.
This procedure is known as Bitcoin “mining‖.
The mathematics of the Bitcoin system is set up in such a way that it becomes progressively more difficult to
―mine‖ Bitcoins over time.
The total number that can ever be mined is limited to around 21 million.
When more people accept bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies for goods and services, their value increases.
There is therefore no way for a central bank to issue a flood of new Bitcoins and devalue those already in
circulation.
Bitcoin transactions done globally can be completed in a few seconds with minimal costs compared to
traditional financial systems.
It can be bought from various international exchanges using credit cards or other electronic means.
The provision of anonymity is widely misused especially in making cross-border transactions and used as a
means for money-laundering, terror funding and drug trafficking, and other illegal activities.
8.24 Cryptocurrencies
Ripple is a technology that acts as both a cryptocurrency and a digital payment network for financial
transactions.
It was released in 2012 and its coin is labeled as XRP.
Ripple operates on an open source and peer-to-peer decentralized platform that allows for a seamless transfer
of money in any form, whether USD, Yen, litecoin, or bitcoin.
It is the fourth-largest cryptocurrency in the world by market capital, which now stands at around $43 billion.
Petro is a cryptocurrency launched by Venezuela backed by oil reserves.
It is mainly to shore the collapsed oil economy.
Venezuela‘s real currency ―Bolivar‖ is in freefall, and the country is sorely lacking in basic needs like food and
medicine.
Facebook announced its plans to launch “Libra” a digital currency, in 2020
For Libra, Facebook announced a dedicated wallet app called ―Calibra.‖
“Calibra” will be built into WhatsApp and Messenger as well, to let users store and use ―Libra‖ coins.
8.26 Belle II
It is an experiment carried out by The High Energy Accelerator Research Organisation (KEK),
Japan to study violations of the standard model and dark matter.
It has a six layer highly sensitive particle detector which indirectly probe new physics using intense electron-
positron beams unlike direct search experiments being carried out in Large Hadron Collidor.
The experiment has a significant Indian participation. The particle detector at the heart of Belle –II has been
built by an Indian Scientists Tariq Aziz and Gagan Mohanty from Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Recently, the experiment has been rolled out. It has a grand collaboration of 700 Scientist from 23 countries.
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8.27 Pratyush
Pratyush is an array of computers recently unveiled in India.
It can deliver a peak power of 6.8 petaflops.
One petaflop is a million billion floating point operations per second and is a reflection of the computing
capacity of a system.
The machines will be installed at two government institutes: 4.0 petaflops HPC facility at Indian Institute of
Tropical Meteorology (IITM), Pune & 2.8 petaflops facility at the National Centre for Medium Range Weather
Forecast, Noida
Pratyush is also the fourth fastest supercomputer in
the world dedicated for weather and climate
research.
It follows machines in Japan, USA and the United
Kingdom.
A key function of the machine‘s computing power
would be monsoon forecasting using a dynamical
model.
With the new system, it would be possible to map
regions in India at a resolution of 3 km and the
globe at 12 km.
8.28 Mihir
Mihir‘ (meaning ‗Sun‘) a High Performance Computer (HPC) System has been installed at the National Centre
for Medium Range Weather Forecasting (NCMRWF).
This HPC facility will be India‘s largest HPC facility in terms of peak capacity and performance.
The new HPC facility is expected to improve the following services:
1. Weather forecasts for predicting extreme weather events.
2. High resolution seasonal/extended range forecasts of active/break spells of Monsoon.
3. Very high resolution prediction of cyclones with more accuracy and lead time.
4. Ocean state forecasts like marine water quality forecasts and Tsunami forecasts.
5. Air quality forecasts for various cities.
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8.33 4D Printing
Scientists have successfully developed the world's first 4D printing for ceramics.
It can be used to create complex, shape-changing objects.
4D printing is conventional 3D printing combined with the additional element of time as the 4th
dimension.
The 4D printed objects can re-shape or self-assemble themselves over time with external stimuli, such as
mechanical force, temperature, or a magnetic field.
The existing 3D-printed ceramic productions are usually difficult to deform and hinder the production of
ceramics with complex shapes.
A novel ceramic ink was developed to stretch the ceramic products beyond its initial length and allow complex
shapes with heat treatment.
8.34 Li-Fi
Light-fidelity (LiFi) is a technology used for free-space communication using visible and near-visible light.
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It is similar to Wireless Fidelity (WiFi), a technology for wireless local area network communication using
microwaves.
Microwaves can pass through walls while transmitting signals whereas visible and near-visible light cannot
pass through walls.
Microwaves are used in WiFi technology to transmit signals which can pass through walls.
Li-Fi, on the other hand, uses visible and near-visible light that carry the LiFi signal. Hence it cannot pass
through walls.
Thus it makes LiFi signal network more secure.
Scientists have recently added a new layer of
security to LiFi.
Light bounces off from walls and falls on the
receiver.
So wall boundaries can be used effectively for
reflecting signals so that communication is
maintained even without line-of-sight
communication between the signal source and
receiver.
Receiving detectors can receive both direct and
reflected signals.
Walls painted with fluorescent and phosphorescent paints absorb and then emit light with marginal loss.
The paints continue to emit light even several hours after the original source of light has been switched off.
This makes the communication signal more effective and secure.
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This had the advantage in that most properly equipped labs would be able to reproduce this standard.
These variable measurements were finally replaced with the international prototype kilogram (IKP), used
today, which is a metal cast from a mixture of platinum and iridium to make it very hard and prevent it
reacting with oxygen.
Although this metal is stored in a highly controlled environment, its weight can change by tiny amounts as
wear and tear causes it to lose mass and dirt causes it to increase.
Hence, even the modern IPK to measure the kilogram can gradually change in mass.
To address this problem, scientists decided that instead of measuring the kilogram against a block stored in a
vault, it should be based on precise values of constants of nature.
Thus the kilogram‘s definition is set to change and the new definition of the kilogram uses a measurement
from another fixed value from nature, Planck‘s constant (h).
Planck‘s constant will be defined as 6.62607015×10−34 joule seconds and can be found by dividing the
electromagnetic frequency of a particle of light or ―photon‖ by the amount of energy it carries.
The constant is usually measured in joule seconds but this can also be expressed askilogram square metres
per second.
Since 1967, the second has been defined as the time it takes for a certain amount of energy to be released as
radiation from atoms of Caesium-133.
This became the basis of all measures of time, and is used in atomic clocks.
The SI unit of the metre is also based on another universal constant, namely the speed of light.
The metre is defined as the distance travelled by light in vacuum in 1/299,792,458 of a second (which is
already defined).
Thus, since definition of a second and a metre have already adjusted to universal constants, by adding these
measurements, along with an exact knowledge of Planck‘s constant, a very precise definition of the kilogram
can be reached easily.
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―Science & Technology: Rural Development‖ is the theme for the congress.
Indian Science Congress is a major focal point for scientists, researchers and academicians interested in
various aspects of scientific discoveries and technologies.
Women Science Congress
The 9th Women Science Congress (WSC) is organized as part of the Indian Science Congress (ISC) at the
University of Agricultural Sciences, Bangalore.
The event highlighted opportunities that can help women overcome the hurdles they face because of their
gender in the pursuit of Science.
Indian Science Congress Association is a premier scientific organisation of India with headquarters at Kolkata,
West Bengal.
The association started in the year 1914 in Kolkata and it meets annually in the first week of January.
The first meeting of the Congress was held in January 1914 at the premises of the Asiatic Society, Calcutta.
TRADE MARK
Trade Mark is a distinctive sign that identifies certain goods or services produced or provided by an individual
or a company.
Trade Mark is allocated to a visual symbol such as name, label, numerals, combination of colours, logo etc.
Legal Basis –It is protected under Trade marks act 1999.
Time period – renew indefinitely with payment of fees for every 10 years.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN
It refers to the ornamental or aesthetic aspects of an article – 3D features such as shape or 2D features like
patterns, lines colours and technical features are not protected
Industrial Design must be new or original
Legal basis – It is protected under Design act 2000
Time period – generally 5 yrs + maximum renewal to 15 years
COPYRIGHT
Copyright is given to authors of literary and artistic works for their artistic creations such as books and other
writings, musical composition, paintings, sculptures, films, computer programmes.
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It provides innovators in developing countries with access to locally based, high quality technology
information and related services.
It will help the innovators to exploit their innovative potential and to create, protect, and manage their
Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs).
The objective is to foster creativity and innovation, thereby promoting entrepreneurship and enhancing social,
economic and cultural development.
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It is managed by Cell for IPR promotion and Management (CIPAM) under the Department of Industrial Policy
and Promotion (DIPP), Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
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Alphonso Maharashtra
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Chunar Balua Patthar of U.P is the second item to get the GI tang under natural goods category after Makrana
marble of Rajasthan.
Karnataka has the highest number of Geographical Indications.
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