About Story of NavIC – crucial indigenous SatNav system:

    • India’s NVS-02 navigation satellite partially failed on February 2 due to engine non-firing, marking another setback for the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS), or NavIC.
    • Conceived after the 1999 Kargil War, NavIC aimed to establish a seven-satellite constellation by 2016 for defence and civilian use. However, only five of the 11 satellites launched since 2013 remain fully operational.
    • Despite ISRO declaring the constellation complete in 2016, failures and replacements have plagued the ₹2,250 crore program.
  • Failures in IRNSS Satellites
    • Atomic Clock Malfunctions (2016 Onward)
      • Failures reported in rubidium atomic clocks used in IRNSS and ESA’s Galileo GNSS.
      • Each IRNSS satellite has three atomic clocks.
      • In July 2016, ISRO confirmed all clocks on IRNSS-1A had stopped working
      • Despite this, ISRO stated the navigation system’s overall performance remained unaffected.
      • Clocks in IRNSS-1C, 1D, 1E, and 1G also developed issues over time.
    • Satellite Launch and Deployment Failures
      • IRNSS-1H, launched in 2017 to replace IRNSS-1A, failed as its heat shield did not detach.
      • The latest satellite, IRNSS-1K (NVS-02), suffered an engine failure in 2025, leaving it in a sub-optimal orbit.
    • Overall Impact
      • Out of 11 IRNSS satellites launched, six have faced failures, affecting India’s indigenous navigation system.
    • Current Operational Status of NavIC Satellites
      • ISRO’s 2023-24 annual report says that following the launch of NVS-01 on May 28, 2023, five NavIC satellites are operational – IRNSS-1B, 1C, 1F, and 1I, and NVS-01 (IRNSS-1J).
      • However, according to some estimates, 1C is only partially operational due to the presence of the old series of atomic clocks that were reported to be malfunctioning.
      • Satellite Generations and Clock Issues
        • First-generation IRNSS satellites (1H and 1I) carried modified European clocks.
        • Next-generation satellites (NVS-01 and NVS-02) use a mix of indigenous and foreign clocks.
        • NVS-02 (IRNSS-1K) failed due to an engine malfunction.
      • Importance of the NavIC System for India
        • Key Services Provided by NavIC
          • Standard Positioning Service (SPS): For general and commercial use.
          • Restricted Service (RS): For defense forces.
          • Offers positioning accuracy better than 20 meters across India and up to 1,500 km around it, with dual-frequency capabilities in L5 and S band.
        • Strategic Importance for Defense
          • NavIC ensures reliable positioning data critical for defense applications, unlike global systems such as GPS, which have military-encrypted services primarily for US and allied forces.
          • Global navigation systems (GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, Beidou, QZSS) are mainly developed for military use, and NavIC provides India with independent and secure navigation.
        • Commercial and Consumer Adoption
          • For NavIC to become widespread, ISRO plans to partner with commercial service providers, including mobile phoneand vehicle manufacturers
          • Qualcomm, a mobile chipmaker, agreed to incorporate NavIC support in some chipsets in December 2023.
        • Future Plans for Expansion
          • ISRO intends to launch three more second-generation satellites (NVS-03, 04, 05) to enhance the NavIC system and ensure continuity of services, despite setbacks like the NVS-02 engine failure.

 

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