Prelims Pinpointer
1. Shilp Didi Programme

What it is
- The Shilp Didi Programme is a government initiative to empower women artisans, enhancing income, skills, and market access.
- Implemented by the Ministry of Textiles through the Office of the Development Commissioner (Handicrafts).
- Launched in 2024, beginning with a 100-day pilot in June 2024.
- Focuses on creating an ecosystem where women artisans become digital-ready micro-entrepreneurs.
Aim
- To build financial independence among women artisans through design upgradation and business training.
- To integrate artisans with modern marketing systems, including e-commerce platforms.
- To strengthen women’s participation in India’s handicrafts value chain.
Key Features
- Training modules cover entrepreneurship, GST compliance, packaging, social-media promotion, and e-commerce onboarding.
- Provides artisans access to Dilli Haat, craft fairs, curated exhibitions, and online marketplaces.
- Initial inclusion: 100 women artisans from 72 districts across 23 states.
- Represents 30 diverse craft traditions, including textiles, metalwork, pottery, embroidery, and natural fibre crafts.
- Capacity-building integrated with NHDP clusters for long-term support.
Significance
- Helps create sustainable non-farm livelihoods, especially in rural and semi-urban regions.
- Promotes digital inclusion by enabling artisans to use online platforms independently.
- Enhances market competitiveness through design innovation and direct consumer access.
- Boosts income significantly, with some artisans reportedly earning over ₹5 lakh after onboarding.
- Strengthens India’s handicrafts sector, which is a key pillar of the country’s cultural economy and women-led entrepreneurship.
2.Hard Corals (Stony Corals)

What They Are
- Hard corals are marine animals forming calcium carbonate skeletons, creating the structural base of coral reefs.
- Reefs built by hard corals support one-third of global marine biodiversity.
Types
- Hard (reef-building) corals: e.g., staghorn and elkhorn; grow in colonies forming limestone frameworks.
- Soft corals: e.g., sea fingers, sea whips; lack rigid skeletons and do not form reefs.
Key Features
- Coral polyps live in colonies and host zooxanthellae algae, providing food via photosynthesis.
- Form reef structures over centuries, enabling coastal protection and biodiversity richness.
- Thrive in warm, clear, shallow waters with stable environmental conditions.
Threats
- Mass bleaching events from extreme heat (1998, 2005, 2023–24) causing starvation and mortality.
- Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease (SCTLD) threatening >30 species across 30 Caribbean nations.
- Decline of key herbivores like sea urchins and parrotfish → uncontrolled macroalgae growth (+85%).
- Result: Caribbean coral cover declined 48% between 1980–2024.
3.Retail Inflation (CPI Inflation)

Context: Retail inflation rose marginally to 0.7% in November 2025 from historic low 0.25% in October; food price contraction offset marginal fuel inflation acceleration.
More in News:
- November’s inflation is second-lowest ever recorded in current Consumer Price Index series; inflation has slowed in seven of first eight months of this financial year 2025-26.
- Food and beverages category saw prices contract by 2.8% in November 2025 compared to high base of 8.2% in November last year and 3.7% contraction in October 2025.
- Clothing and footwear inflation eased marginally to 1.5% from 1.7%; housing category inflation remained virtually unchanged at 2.95% in November compared to 2.96% in October 2025.
- Edible oils witnessed sharp increases though topline number down to 7.9%; mustard and coconut oil were main drivers of inflation in food basket despite overall food price contraction trend.
Meaning of Retail Inflation
- Retail inflation reflects changes in prices of goods and services purchased by households.
- It is measured through the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for a fixed consumption basket.
- CPI-based inflation indicates the percentage change in the overall price index over time.
- The index tracks the evolving cost of living and daily consumption expenditure patterns.
What CPI Indicates
- CPI shows shifts in the purchasing power of consumers over different periods.
- It reflects the expensiveness of goods and services usually bought by households.
- CPI trends help assess changes in the value of the Indian rupee in real terms.
- It signals how rising prices affect living standards and consumer welfare.
How CPI Is Calculated
- CPI measures price changes relative to a base year, which is currently 2012.
- It compares the cost of a fixed basket of goods and services between two periods.
- Formula: CPI = (Cost in Current Year ÷ Cost in Base Year) × 100.
- The basket may be revised periodically to reflect changing consumption patterns.
- The National Statistical Office (NSO) compiles CPI for Rural, Urban, and Combined sectors monthly.
Uses of Consumer Price Index
- CPI is a key macroeconomic indicator used to track overall inflation trends.
- It guides the central bank and government in inflation targeting and policy decisions.
- CPI serves as a deflator in national accounts for deriving real economic indicators.
- It helps assess the real value of salaries, pensions, and wages over time.
- CPI fluctuations indicate shifts in the purchasing power of the nation’s currency.
4.Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM)

Context: CAQM constituted 15-member committee to control air pollution from vehicular emissions, reviewing clean mobility policies, BS norms, EV initiatives, fuel efficiency standards across Delhi-NCR region.
CAQM
- Statutory Basis and Mandate
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- CAQM is a statutory body created under the 2021 Act for Delhi–NCR air governance.
- Its mandate includes coordination, research, identification, and resolution of air-quality issues.
- The Commission undertakes measures for preventing and controlling air pollution in Delhi-NCR.
- It addresses pollution sources in adjoining states affecting Delhi’s overall air quality.
- CAQM must coordinate monitoring activities with Delhi, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, and Uttar Pradesh governments.
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- Powers of CAQM
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- The Commission can restrict activities that adversely affect regional air quality.
- It may investigate and conduct research to understand pollution trends and challenges.
- It prepares codes and guidelines for preventing and controlling regional air pollution.
- CAQM issues binding directions related to inspections, regulations, and compliance measures.
- All concerned authorities and individuals must comply with CAQM orders without exception.
- The Commission remains directly accountable to Parliament, strengthening its oversight framework.
- Composition of CAQM
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- CAQM is chaired by a Secretary-level or Chief Secretary-level officer from government.
- The Chairperson serves a three-year term or until reaching 70 years, whichever is earlier.
- The body includes five ex-officio members from Delhi, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, and Uttar Pradesh.
- It also comprises three full-time technical members to support scientific decision-making.
- Additionally, three NGO representatives contribute public and environmental perspectives.
- Technical experts from CPCB, ISRO, and NITI Aayog strengthen its analytical capabilities.
5.Indian Knowledge System (IKS)

Context: SCERT Delhi started five-day capacity-building programme for government school teachers on Indian Knowledge Systems at IIT Mandi and Central Sanskrit University, Kerala.
About Indian Knowledge System (IKS)
- The Indian Knowledge System (IKS) is an innovative cell under the Ministry of Education at AICTE, New Delhi.
- It aims to promote interdisciplinary research on diverse dimensions of India’s traditional knowledge.
- The division works to preserve, document, and disseminate IKS for research and societal use.
- IKS intends to highlight India’s rich cultural heritage and traditional intellectual contributions.
- Its scope spans arts, literature, agriculture, sciences, engineering, architecture, management, and economics.
Objectives of the IKS Division
- Promote studies exploring the historical, scientific, and cultural foundations of indigenous knowledge.
- Enable researchers to apply IKS insights for modern societal and technological solutions.
- Strengthen national efforts to integrate traditional knowledge into contemporary academic discourse.
- Encourage younger generations to understand India’s civilizational knowledge strengths.
- Support creation of a sustainable ecosystem for long-term IKS research.
Functions of the IKS Division
- Facilitate and coordinate interdisciplinary IKS-related research among domestic and international institutions.
- Engage universities, national institutes, laboratories, ministries, and private entities in collaborative research.
- Establish and supervise subject-wise interdisciplinary groups comprising researchers and experts.
- Promote awareness and popularisation schemes for wider public understanding of IKS.
- Facilitate funding support for research projects and develop mechanisms for effective implementation.
- Provide policy recommendations to strengthen IKS integration into education and national development.
6.National Green Tribunal (NGT)

About the National Green Tribunal
- The NGT was established in 2010 under the National Green Tribunal Act, 2010.
- It serves as a specialised judicial body to ensure speedy environmental justice in India.
- The Tribunal addresses issues concerning environment protection, forest conservation, and environmental rights.
- It also provides compensation for personal and property damages arising from environmental violations.
- The NGT aims to dispose of cases within six months, guided by natural justice.
Key Features of NGT
- The NGT includes judicial and expert members for scientific and legal clarity.
- It functions independent of the Civil Procedure Code, relying on natural justice principles.
- It operates through regional benches at Delhi, Bhopal, Pune, Kolkata, and Chennai.
- A circuit bench mechanism ensures broader accessibility for litigants.
- The Tribunal commenced formal operations on 4 July 2011.
Composition
- The Chairperson is a retired Supreme Court Judge or Chief Justice of a High Court.
- Judicial members include 10–20 former Supreme Court or High Court judges.
- Expert members include 10–20 specialists with advanced qualifications in science, engineering, or technology.
- All appointments are made by the Central Government, with defined age and tenure limits.
Powers and Jurisdiction
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- The NGT adjudicates disputes under seven major environmental laws, including
- Water Act, Air Act, Environment Protection Act, Forest Conservation Act, Biological Diversity Act, and Public Liability Insurance Act.
- It functions with civil court powers and follows natural justice principles.
- The Tribunal may impose penalties, order relief, and award compensation.
- It holds suo motu powers to act without formal complaints.
- It aims to decide matters within six months of filing.
Significance
- Provides quick and specialised environmental justice, reducing burden on regular courts.
- Ensures compensation for victims of pollution and ecological harm.
- Strengthens enforcement of environmental laws and compliance norms.
- Promotes sustainable development through strict oversight of EIA processes.
Landmark Judgments
- Almitra H. Patel (2012): Imposed nationwide ban on open waste burning.
- Save Mon Region (2013): Suspended environmental clearance for a major hydro project.
- Vardhaman Kaushik (2014): Directed action against non-compliant industries.
- Uttarakhand Floods Case (2014): Applied “polluter pays” for compensation.
- Art of Living Case (2016): Imposed ₹5 crore fine for floodplain damage.
- Ganga Pollution Case (2017): Ordered strict industrial and sewage regulation.
Challenges
- Limited jurisdiction excludes key laws like FRA and Wildlife Protection Act.
- Financial constraints hinder timely case disposal.
- Inadequate benches restrict reach and efficiency.
- Vacancies and appointment delays increase pendency.
- Lack of a uniform compensation formula complicates damage assessment.
Way Forward
- Increase funding and institutional capacity for effective functioning.
- Expand jurisdiction to cover all major environmental statutes.
- Strengthen transparency and public accountability mechanisms.
- Improve capacity building for handling complex environmental disputes.
7.e-Cigarettes

What are e-Cigarettes?
- E-cigarettes are battery-operated devices that heat a liquid to create an inhalable aerosol.
- The liquid commonly contains nicotine, glycerin, propylene glycol, flavouring agents, and chemicals.
- They are also called Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS) or Electronic Non-Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENNDS).
- These devices come in varied designs, including pens, pods, and cartridges.
- They mimic smoking behaviour and often appeal to youth because of flavours and design.
WHO Concerns Regarding e-Cigarettes
- Ineffectiveness for Smoking Cessation
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- WHO states e-cigarettes do not help reduce tobacco use at population level.
- Growing evidence shows negative health impacts instead of cessation benefits.
- They remain widely available and aggressively marketed to young people.
- 34 countries ban them; 88 have no minimum legal age, and 74 lack regulations.
- Impact on Youth
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- E-cigarettes risk early nicotine dependence among children and teenagers.
- Attractive marketing and flavours increase youth experimentation.
- Weak regulations enable easy access and long-term addiction.
- Rising Usage Trends
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- Children aged 13–15 years use e-cigarettes more than adults in all WHO regions.
- Usage among Canada’s 16–19-year-olds doubled (2017–22).
- In England, youth users tripled in three years, highlighting a global surge.
- Health Risks
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- E-cigarettes emit toxic, cancer-causing chemicals, increasing heart and lung disease risks.
- They may impair brain development, learning abilities, and fetal health.
- Nicotine-containing devices are highly addictive and harmful to bystanders.
Arguments in Favour of e-Cigarettes
- Harm Reduction
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- Supporters claim they offer less harmful alternatives to tobacco smoking.
- They deliver nicotine without many carcinogens found in cigarettes.
- Economic Revenue
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- Legalizing e-cigarettes could generate tax revenue and enable regulation.
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- Consumer Choice
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- Proponents argue adults should access alternative nicotine options when quitting is difficult.
What is Nicotine?
- Nicotine is a plant alkaloid found in tobacco or produced synthetically.
- It acts as both a sedative and stimulant.
- E-cigarettes may contain up to 36 mg/mL nicotine, far higher than cigarettes (1.2–1.4 mg/mL).
- Karnataka has classified nicotine as Class A poison.
Government Initiatives on Tobacco Control
- National Tobacco Control Programme (NTCP) strengthens monitoring and awareness.
- COTPA Amendment Rules 2023 regulate advertising and supply.
- National Tobacco Quitline Services assist cessation efforts.
- Budget 2023–24 raised NCCD on cigarettes by 16%.
- OTT platforms must display tobacco health warnings during streaming.
Way Forward
- Strong measures needed to curb e-cigarette uptake and reduce nicotine addiction.
- Experts suggest regulating and taxing e-cigarettes like sin goods to discourage misuse.
- Policies should align with national health priorities and comprehensive tobacco control frameworks.
8.Virtual Private Network (VPN)

What is a VPN?
- A Virtual Private Network (VPN) creates a digital link between a user’s device and a remote VPN server.
- It forms a point-to-point encrypted tunnel, protecting personal data from external access.
- A VPN masks the user’s IP address, enabling private and anonymous browsing.
- It helps bypass website blocks, censorship, and restrictive firewalls online.
- The system is called virtual (no physical cables), private (data hidden), and networked (multiple devices connected).
Advantages of a VPN
- Secures Personal Data
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- A VPN scrambles and encrypts user data, making it unreadable without a decryption key.
- It hides online activity from third parties, ensuring safe and private browsing.
- Bypasses Censorship and Surveillance
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- Users can spoof locations to access restricted websites or services.
- It helps circumvent government firewalls, regional blocks, and strict surveillance regimes.
- Prevents ISP and Third-Party Tracking
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- ISPs track browsing behaviour using device-specific IP addresses.
- A VPN routes traffic through a remote server, masking the original IP.
- This prevents ISP monitoring and protects sensitive personal information.
What is Encryption?
- Encryption is a method of converting readable data (plaintext) into unreadable ciphertext.
- Only parties with an authorized decryption key can restore and understand the information.
- It serves as a fundamental tool for ensuring data security and confidentiality.
9.National Technical Textiles Mission (NTTM)

About the Mission
- The National Technical Textiles Mission (NTTM) was launched in 2020 by the Ministry of Textiles.
- It aims to expand and strengthen India’s technical textiles sector through innovation and capacity building.
- The Mission period spans 2020–21 to 2025–26, with an outlay of ₹1,480 crore.
- It seeks to enhance domestic use of technical textiles and boost India’s global competitiveness.
Components of NTTM
- Research, Innovation, and Development
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- Supports R&D projects for developing new materials, fibres, products, and innovative processes.
- Encourages proposals that advance technology and improve performance efficiency in technical textiles.
- Promotion and Market Development
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- Promotes wider domestic adoption of technical textiles across industries.
- Facilitates international collaborations and market expansion initiatives.
- Export Promotion
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- Focuses on scaling exports of technical textiles by establishing a dedicated export council.
- Aims to integrate Indian firms into global technical textile value chains.
- Education, Training, and Skill Development
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- Strengthens education in technical textiles through courses, internships, and specialised training.
- Involves top institutes and industries in creating a skilled workforce.
What are Technical Textiles?
- Technical textiles are materials used mainly for functional and performance purposes, not aesthetics.
- They include industrial, functional, performance, engineering, and hi-tech textiles.
- Classified into 12 categories: Agrotech, Oekotech, Buildtech, Meditech, Geotech, Clothtech, Mobiltech, Hometech, Sportstech, Indutech, Protech, Packtech.
- Applications span automobiles, construction, medical devices, machinery, and safety equipment, helping solve practical and industrial challenges.
10.July National Charter

About the July National Charter
- A political reform blueprint created after the July 2024 mass uprising in Bangladesh.
- Seeks major constitutional and governance reforms in line with the 1972 Constitution.
- Developed through national consensus, involving the interim government under Muhammad Yunus and 30 political parties.
- To be endorsed through a national referendum alongside the 2026 general election.
Aims of the Charter
- To institutionalise democratic reforms after the July Revolution.
- To revise constitutional, electoral, administrative and judicial frameworks.
- To safeguard pro-democracy gains through enforceable constitutional protections.
- To embed reforms within a two-year timeframe after a new government assumes office.
Key Features
- Contains a 28-point reform agenda formulated through multi-party consultations.
- Commits to amendments via constitutional change, legal updates or new legislation.
- Guarantees legal safeguards for uninterrupted implementation and future protection.
- Recognises the July 2024 uprising as a historic event for national democracy.
- Endorsed by the National Consensus Commission and supported by 25–30 parties, reflecting wide public acceptability.
Significance
- Lays the foundation for a new democratic trajectory after Sheikh Hasina’s exit.
- Aims to restore electoral credibility, judicial independence and institutional balance.
- Could reshape Bangladesh’s political architecture and anti-corruption frameworks.
- Represents a crucial step in post-crisis nation building, shifting the system away from authoritarian patterns.
- Offers India geopolitical continuity by strengthening democratic stability in a neighbouring state.
11. Diving Support Craft (DSC) A20

About DSC A20
- DSC A20 is the Indian Navy’s first indigenously designed Diving Support Craft.
- Built specifically for underwater inspection, repair, diving missions, and coastal salvage operations.
- Developed by Titagarh Rail Systems Limited (TRSL), Kolkata.
- Commissioned at Kochi under Southern Naval Command.
Aims
- To enhance the Navy’s operational capability in underwater tasks and coastal support.
- To strengthen indigenous defence manufacturing under Aatmanirbhar Bharat.
- To augment diving readiness, maritime safety, and near-coast operational efficiency.
Key Features
- Catamaran hull ensures high stability, improved seakeeping, and enhanced deck space.
- Displacement of around 390 tonnes, supporting extensive diving operations.
- Equipped with advanced, state-of-the-art diving systems meeting top safety norms.
- Designed following Naval Rules and IRS standards, ensuring high engineering integrity.
- Underwent full hydrodynamic and model testing at NSTL, Visakhapatnam.
- Serves as the lead ship in a five-craft series, marking a scalable indigenous platform.
Significance
- Strengthens India’s capacity for salvage, underwater repair, and mission support.
- Enhances the operational preparedness of the Southern Naval Command.
- Marks an important advancement in domestic shipbuilding and defence innovation.
- Demonstrates smooth cooperation between industry, research institutions, and the Navy.
- Helps reduce reliance on foreign diving-support platforms, bolstering strategic autonomy.
12. Hydrogen Fuel Cell Passenger Vessel

About the Vessel
- India launched its first indigenous hydrogen fuel cell-powered passenger vessel in Varanasi.
- Developed by Cochin Shipyard Ltd (CSL), showcasing a major clean-mobility breakthrough.
- Operates along the Ganga from Namo Ghat, Varanasi, marking its commercial debut.
- Built as a 24-metre AC catamaran designed for zero-emission passenger movement.
Key Features
- Capacity to carry 50 passengers with full air-conditioned comfort.
- Powered by Low-Temperature PEM fuel cells, ensuring quiet, vibration-free cruising.
- Emits only water, achieving completely pollution-free navigation.
- Endurance of around 8 hours per hydrogen refill for daily operations.
- Equipped with a hybrid system integrating hydrogen cells, batteries, and solar panels.
- Cruises at approximately 6.5 knots, maintaining energy efficiency and operational stability.
- Catamaran hull provides high stability and greater deck space for smooth river operations.
About Hydrogen Fuel Cell
- A fuel cell converts hydrogen and oxygen into electricity, producing only water and heat.
- Hydrogen at the anode splits into protons and electrons via a catalyst.
- Protons cross the PEM membrane, while electrons generate power through an external circuit.
- Reaction at the cathode forms water, completing the clean-energy cycle.
- Offers high efficiency, silent functioning, and no emission of pollutants or particulates.
Significance
- Represents a major step in green inland water transport in India.
- Positions India as a frontrunner in clean marine engineering and hydrogen mobility.
- Supports national decarbonisation goals and future hydrogen-based transport systems.
13. UNESCO Recognition For National Cuisine

What It Is
- UNESCO inscribed Italian cooking on its Intangible Cultural Heritage List, recognising an entire national cuisine for the first time.
- Recognition granted during the 20th session of the UNESCO Intergovernmental Committee in Delhi.
- Entry titled “Italian cooking: Between sustainability and biocultural diversity.”
Key Characteristics
- Defined as a cultural and social expression rooted in artisanal practices and respect for ingredients.
- Emphasises conviviality, shared meals, and intergenerational transmission of culinary knowledge.
- Uses seasonal and local produce, reflecting regional diversity and environmental awareness.
- Strong tradition of anti-waste philosophy, embedded in daily cooking practices.
- Skills passed informally within families, particularly through grandparents, and formally through schools and culinary institutes.
Significance
- Makes Italy the first nation globally to receive UNESCO recognition for its entire cuisine.
- Reinforces Italian cuisine as a core pillar of cultural identity and national pride.
- Strengthens political and cultural narratives linking food heritage with national representation.
- Supports preservation of biocultural diversity and sustainable culinary practices.
- Encourages continued protection of artisanal methods amid modern industrial pressures.
14. BlueBird-6

About BlueBird-6
- BlueBird-6 is a 6.5-tonne American communication satellite, the heaviest such payload launched by India.
- Part of AST SpaceMobile’s next-generation LEO constellation enabling direct-to-device mobile broadband.
Key Features
- Equipped with the largest commercial phased-array antenna in LEO (~2,400 sq ft when deployed).
- Belongs to the Block-2 series, which is 3.5× larger and 10× more powerful than earlier models.
- Provides up to 10,000 MHz bandwidth, supporting high-capacity global connectivity.
- Enables non-continuous direct-to-device communication, especially in regions lacking terrestrial networks.
About Launch Vehicle LVM3
- LVM3 is India’s heaviest-lift rocket, supporting 8,000 kg to LEO and 4,000 kg to GTO.
- Selected launcher for Gaganyaan human space missions.
- Features a three-stage design:
- S200 solid boosters with 204-tonne propellant load.
- L110 liquid core stage with twin engines.
- C25 cryogenic stage powered by the CE-20 engine.
- Measures 43.5 m height with a 640-tonne liftoff mass and 5-m fairing.
- Conducts precise staging, injecting payloads into GTO in ~974 seconds.
- Recently launched CMS-3 (4.4 tonnes) successfully.
- Human-rated variant planned for astronaut missions in 2027.
Significance
- Marks a major milestone for India in commercial satellite launch services.
- Enhances global confidence in LVM3 as a high-capacity launcher for heavy payloads.
- Boosts India’s position in the commercial space market.
15. 3I/ATLAS

What it is
- The 3I/ATLAS planetary-defence drill is the world’s largest global simulation testing detection and response to near-Earth objects.
- Led jointly by ESA, NASA and UN-IAWN, with participation from worldwide space agencies.
- Uses real observations of the comet 3I/ATLAS, travelling nearly 60 km/s, adding real-world unpredictability.
Aim
- Strengthen global readiness for high-velocity celestial threats.
- Evaluate early-warning systems, tracking networks, emergency coordination, and public-communication frameworks.
- Identify gaps in international cooperation, data-sharing, and psychological preparedness.
How it Works
- Agencies track 3I/ATLAS using ground telescopes and space-based sensors to refine its orbit continuously.
- Scientists study trajectory deviations from gravity or solar forces to detect potential Earth-intersection risks.
- Thousands of impact-probability simulations test various uncertainty ranges.
- Global teams model responses such as deflection missions, evacuations and civil-defence mobilisation.
- Drill evaluates how fast NASA, ESA, ISRO, CNSA, JAXA and UN-IAWN exchange alerts and coordinate decisions.
Key Features
- Real celestial object adds authentic complexity to tracking exercises.
- Includes planetary-defence modelling, anomaly-response systems, and rapid-coordination protocols.
- Tests management of misinformation and public communication during uncertain high-risk events.
- Occurs amid growing geopolitical interest in space security and Europe’s record ESA budget.
Significance
- Enhances global capacity to handle future asteroid threats, a rising planetary-security concern.
- Reveals systemic weaknesses, such as absence of a global public-guidance mechanism during space anomalies.
- Strengthens coordination among major space powers and builds scientific preparedness for real impact-risk events.
16. Q-day

What it is
- Q-day refers to the moment when a quantum computer becomes powerful enough to break modern cryptography, especially RSA-2048 and ECC.
- Triggered renewed debate after Google’s Quantum Echoes experiment with the 65-qubit Willow processor.
Background
- The risk stems from Shor’s algorithm (1994), which demonstrated that quantum computers can factor large numbers exponentially faster.
- Once achieved, it would undermine the mathematical foundations of public-key cryptography securing global digital systems.
Key Features of Q-day Risk
- Ability to break RSA and ECC encryption, compromising banking, military, and civilian internet security.
- Enables a “harvest now, decrypt later” strategy — storing encrypted data today for future quantum decryption.
- Requires millions of logical qubits, far beyond today’s noisy, error-prone quantum processors.
- Drives the global shift to Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) such as CRYSTALS–Kyber and Dilithium (standardised by NIST).
Significance
- Represents a major turning point in cybersecurity, geopolitics and digital sovereignty.
- Forces governments, banks, and cloud systems to transition to PQC before the end of this decade.
- Critical for protecting defence communications, personal data, identity systems, and national infrastructure.
- Shapes the next phase of the global technology race, as nations invest heavily to secure cryptographic resilience.
17. Western Tragopan

What it is
- The Western Tragopan (Tragopan melanocephalus), also called Jujurana, is one of the world’s rarest pheasants.
- It is the state bird of Himachal Pradesh and a flagship species of the Western Himalayas.
- Recognised for its ecological sensitivity and striking sexual dimorphism.
Habitat
- Occupies moist temperate forests between 2,400–3,600 m elevation.
- Prefers dense ringal bamboo, rhododendron undergrowth, and coniferous forest patches.
- Key distribution areas include Great Himalayan National Park, Kazinag, Limber (J&K), Uttarakhand, and northern Pakistan.
IUCN Status
- Listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List.
- Global population estimated at 3,000–9,500 mature individuals, forming a single fragile subpopulation.
Key Characteristics
- Male: velvet-black head, crimson breast, white speckling, and bright blue–orange facial wattles used in courtship displays.
- Female: brown, camouflaged, smaller; juveniles resemble females.
- Ground-dwelling, secretive, active mainly at dawn and dusk.
- Omnivorous diet: berries, buds, shoots, seeds, and insects.
- Breeding in May–June, laying 3–5 eggs in concealed nests.
Significance
- An important indicator species for Himalayan forest health.
- Holds cultural symbolism in Himachal Pradesh.
- Sarahan Pheasantry’s captive-breeding programme has stabilised population numbers, producing over 40 individuals, providing insurance against extinction.
- Conservation success demonstrates the importance of habitat protection and scientific breeding interventions.

