Prelims-Pinpointer-for-6-September-2025

Why in News: European Space Agency’s (ESA) Solar Orbiter, a joint ESA–NASA mission launched in 2020, has revealed the origins of Solar Energetic Electrons (SEEs).

  • It is the first spacecraft to image the Sun’s poles and has traced energetic particles back to their solar sources, providing crucial data for predicting space weather.

Key Findings

  • Between Nov 2020–Dec 2022, detected 300+ bursts of energetic electrons.

Identified two types of SEEs:

1. From solar flares (sudden explosions on the Sun’s surface).

2. From Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) (large plasma + magnetic eruptions).

Found a time lag between solar events and particle detection due to escape time + turbulence scattering.

First clear direct evidence linking electrons in space to their solar origin.

Mission Highlights

Solar Orbiter:

  • Joint ESA–NASA mission (launched: Feb 2020).
  • Flies closer to the Sun than any previous mission.
  • Equipped with 10 instruments (in-situ & remote sensing).

Studies:

  • Sun’s 11-year magnetic cycle.
  • Heating of solar corona.
  • Formation & acceleration of solar wind.

Implications

Space Weather Impact: Solar flares, CMEs, solar winds can disrupt:

  • Satellite communication.
  • GPS navigation.
  • Power grids on Earth.
  • Pose risks to astronaut safety.
  • Improved prediction → better mitigation of these risks.

Static Info

  • Solar Flares: Sudden bursts of radiation from the Sun’s surface.
  • Coronal Mass Ejection (CME): Expulsion of plasma + magnetic fields from the Sun’s corona.
  • Solar Wind: Stream of charged particles released from the Sun’s upper atmosphere.
  • Space Weather: Conditions on the Sun and in the solar wind, magnetosphere, ionosphere, and thermosphere that affect Earth’s technology and environment.

Other Missions Studying the Sun:

  • NASA’s Parker Solar Probe (2018).
  • ISRO’s Aditya-L1 Mission (2023).

Why in News : Punjab is facing one of the worst floods in recent memory; all 23 districts declared flood-hit.

Impact:

  • 3,192 villages inundated.
  • 3.81 lakh people affected.
  • 1.17 lakh hectares of farmland destroyed.
  • 43 deaths reported.

Rivers and Basin

  • Punjab drained by 3 perennial rivers: Ravi, Beas, Sutlej.
  • Several seasonal rivers and hill streams also contribute.
  • State lies in downstream catchment of Himalayas (Himachal Pradesh & J&K).
  • Heavy rainfall in catchment → high inflow in Punjab.

Key Infrastructure & Management Issues

Madhopur Barrage (Ravi), Bhakra Dam (Sutlej), Thein Dam (Ranjit Sagar, Ravi) critical to regulate flow.

Bhakra Beas Management Board (BBMB) regulates dams but:

  • Stores excess water for power & irrigation.
  • Releases water suddenly in Aug-Sept → flooding.
  • Delay in information sharing aggravates crisis.

Example: Madhopur barrage gates damaged during heavy rainfall → worsened floods.

Governance Challenges

  • Lack of coordination between Punjab state irrigation dept. & centrally controlled BBMB.
  • Poor real-time communication of water release.
  • Encroachment on riverbeds, weak embankments add to damage.
  • Accountability gap as dams not owned by Punjab but impact state heavily.

Larger Problem

  • Heavy rainfall is natural, but mismanagement of dams, transparency issues, and lack of scientific discipline worsen floods.
  • Punjab’s fertile alluvial plains (1.53% of India’s land, produces 12% rice & 20% wheat) are highly vulnerable.

Why in News: China to impose temporary anti-dumping duties on pork imports from the European Union (EU).

  • Duties range between 15.6% – 62.4%.
  • Will be effective from September 10, 2025 (as per China’s Ministry of Commerce).
  • Move comes amid strained China–EU trade ties.

Background

Anti-dumping duties: Trade tariffs imposed by a country to protect domestic industries against imports sold below fair market value.

China’s reason: To safeguard domestic pork industry from unfairly priced EU imports.

EU stance: Brussels vowed to defend its producers and may retaliate or challenge at WTO.

Impact: Escalates ongoing China–EU trade disputes (earlier spats on electric vehicles, green tech, solar panels, wine, etc.).

Static Info 

European Union (EU):

  • Political & economic union of 27 member states.
  • Largest trading bloc in the world.
  • HQ: Brussels, Belgium.
  • Common currency: Euro (19 members use it).

China–EU Trade:

  • EU is China’s 2nd largest trading partner.
  • China is EU’s largest source of imports.
  • Key exports from EU → China: machinery, vehicles, aircraft, chemicals, pork.
  • Key imports from China → EU: electronics, textiles, machinery, steel.

World Trade Organization (WTO):

  • Founded: 1995.
  • HQ: Geneva, Switzerland.
  • Deals with rules of international trade and dispute resolution.

Why in News: Recently, researchers recorded a new orchid plant in Vijoynagar, Arunachal Pradesh.Earlier, Gastrochilus pechei was known to bloom only in Myanmar.

Key Details

  • Scientific name: Gastrochilus pechei
  • Common name: Peche’s Lip Orchid
  • Family: Orchidaceae
  • Genus: Gastrochilus
  • First recorded in 1825.
  • Monopodial orchid genus → 77 species found across tropical, subtropical & temperate Asia.
  • In India → 22 species recorded, 15 from Arunachal Pradesh.

Characteristics

  • Small epiphytic orchid (grows on trees).
  • Leaves: Single leathery leaf, sheathing base, unequally bilobed apex.
  • Inflorescence: Lateral, short, sub-umbellate, bearing few to many flowers.
  • Sepals & petals: Free, spreading.
  • Lip: Subglobose, saccate hypochile; fan-shaped epichile with fimbriate margins.
  • Column: Short, thick; 2 subglobose pollinia.

Habitat

  • Found at 1,200 m altitude in moist evergreen rainforests.
  • Thrives on small trees near riverbanks.
  • Flowering season: September–October.
  • Location: Vijoynagar, one of India’s remotest administrative circles, bordering Myanmar.

Why in News: The 16th-century Vrindavani Vastra, a priceless silk textile from Assam, will be exhibited in Assam in 2027. The British Museum (London) has agreed to loan the textile for 18 months — first time it will be displayed on Indian soil.

Historical Significance

  • Woven under the guidance of Srimanta Sankardeva (saint-reformer, Bhakti movement leader of Assam).
  • Depicts scenes from the life of Lord Krishna & verses from Sankardeva’s devotional play Kaliyadamana.
  • Showcases Assam’s cultural and religious heritage (16th century).
  • Technique: Lampas weaving – highly complex, requiring two weavers simultaneously.

Journey to the British Museum

  • Taken to Tibet in 17th–18th century.
  • British explorers collected fragments in 19th–20th century.
  • Later acquired by the India Museum → transferred to British Museum.
  • Around 20 fragments survive, with British Museum holding a stitched cloth of 12 silk strips (9+ metres long).

Conditions for Loan & Exhibition

  • Assam must build a new museum (with strict environmental & security standards).
  • Land allotted to JSW Group in Guwahati (CSR initiative).
  • President of India to provide sovereign guarantee ensuring textile’s safe return after loan.

Artistic Features

12 silk strips depicting:

  • Krishna’s life events, Vishnu’s avataras, devotional verses.
  • Captions woven in fabric.

Upper portion: 

  • Chinese damask & brocade with dragon motifs (added later).
  • Equipped with metal rings for suspension.

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