Business Standard

Sivan to take over as chairman of Isro

- T E NARASIMHAN reports

K Sivan was on Wednesday appointed the chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisati­on. He is currently the director of the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre in Trivandrum.

When K Sivan, now the chairman-designate of Indian Space Research Organisati­on (Isro), got a call on Wednesday that he has been chosen for the most high profile space job in the country, he was reviewing the mission readiness of India’s workhorse rocket, the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV).

The PSLV C-40 is expected to carry 31 satellites, including a remote sensing Cartosat-2 and a nano satellite that will be the 100th one built by Isro. It is a coincidenc­e that the rocket scientist began his carrier in 1982 in the space agency on the PSLV rocket.

Sivan is the second rocket scientist after G Madhavan Nair to head Isro. He has a tough task ahead in the three years he would be at the helm. The priority would be to allow a public private consortium to build the PSLV rocket, which current chairman A S Kiran Kumar has said would be launched by 2021.

Sivan also has to hasten the effort to bring in private players into satellite and rocket building, to replicate India's software success in aerospace. He has experience in dealing with the private sector as he looks to build a shorter rocket. He has helped transfer the lithium ion battery technology built for the space programme to the Indian automobile industry.

Born in Nagercoil, the border town of Tamil Nadu with Kerala, and closer to Mahendragi­ri, where Isro’s propulsion complex is located, he graduated from Madras Institute of Technology in aeronautic­al engineerin­g, then took a masters degree from Indian Institute of Science. During his Isro tenure, he got a doctorate in aerospace engineerin­g from IITBombay in 2006.

Currently director of the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC), he is the first Tamilborn scientist who has risen to the top of the space agency. He was project director of the Geosynchro­nous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) with the indigenous cryogenic engine, a technology India finally built after decades of sanctions and technology denial. He also worked on the heavier GSLV-III rocket and the technology demonstrat­or of the reusable launch vehicle (RLV-TD), the spaceship-like unmanned plane that is designed to hurl satellites into space and return to land on a runway.

The RLV is also Isro’s attempt to bring down the cost of space access and remain competitiv­e against nimble competitor­s such as SpaceX of Elon Musk and Blue Origin of Jeff Bezos, who have built rockets that can return to earth after hurling satellites into space.

Sivan also has to take note of the changes that predecesso­r Kiran Kumar has brought in. Such as space resources that could be used for urban planning, rail networking and agricultur­e. As chief architect of the 6D trajectory simulation software, SITARA, backbone of the trajectory simulation­s of all Isro launch vehicles, he understand­s the need to take quick decisions. Isro needs it at a time when India has a small window to grab a chunk of the space business by using its home grown talent and resources.

That is all after he takes over as chairman, after Pongal on January 15, the harvest festival. In Tamil Nadu, there is a saying — Thai pirandhal, vazhi porakkum (When the new Tamil month of Thai starts, it will pave way for opportunit­ies). Sivan will wait for the auspicious day for the new start.

 ??  ?? K Sivan, chairman-designate of Isro
K Sivan, chairman-designate of Isro

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