Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Friday, 17 April 2026

India's Nuclear Leap

India's Nuclear Leap

India’s big nuclear leap: Stage 2 criticality and energy security

I write as someone who has followed India’s long nuclear journey for decades. When the Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) at Kalpakkam attained first criticality on 6 April 2026, I felt a familiar mix of pride and urgency. That controlled, self-sustaining chain reaction is not just a technical milestone — it is the opening of a new chapter in India’s three-stage plan to secure fuel sustainability, exploit our vast thorium, and strengthen long-term energy and climate resilience [1].

What does “Stage 2 criticality” mean?

  • Criticality: the moment a reactor core sustains a controlled chain reaction — neutrons produced = neutrons lost — enabling the unit to be tested and progressively ramped toward power generation [1].
  • Stage 2 (fast breeder) specifics: a fast breeder reactor (FBR) uses a fast neutron spectrum and typically a liquid‑metal coolant (PFBR uses sodium) to fission plutonium-bearing fuel while converting abundant fertile isotopes (U-238, and later thorium in blankets) into new fissile material. In short: it can produce more fissile atoms than it consumes — it “breeds” fuel [3].

That breeding function is the strategic value: instead of depending solely on limited domestic uranium or imports, fast breeders multiply the usable energy extracted from the material we already have and create the fissile feedstock needed for large-scale thorium use in Stage 3 [3].

A quick refresher: India’s three-stage programme

  • Stage 1 — PHWRs using natural uranium to generate power and produce plutonium as a by‑product (already well established).
  • Stage 2 — Fast breeder reactors using plutonium-based fuel to breed more plutonium (and, with thorium blankets, to produce U-233) — PFBR is the prototype for this stage [3].
  • Stage 3 — Thorium-based reactors (thermal breeders / AHWR-style concepts) that use U-233 bred in Stage 2 to run largely on thorium, India’s abundant resource [3][6].

The PFBR’s criticality signals India’s practical entry into Stage 2 — the bridge between our current fleet and a thorium‑anchored future [1][3].

Why this matters for fuel sustainability and climate goals

  • Resource leverage: India has modest uranium but very large thorium reserves. Fast breeders can convert U-238 to Pu-239 and, via thorium blankets, Th-232 to U-233 — creating the fissile inventory that enables widespread thorium use later [3][6].
  • Long-term low-carbon baseload: a successful breeding programme expands the realistic scale of nuclear power, giving policymakers a dispatchable, low‑carbon complement to renewables as India pursues climate targets [1][7].
  • Waste and actinide management: fast reactors can also be configured to transmute long‑lived actinides, reducing long‑term radiotoxicity of waste streams compared with once‑through cycles [4].

Recent milestones and timelines

  • Core loading and preparatory steps began in 2024; AERB approvals and low‑power testing preceded full-power ramping [2].
  • First criticality (PFBR, Kalpakkam): 6 April 2026 — the start of low‑power physics experiments and staged power increase under regulatory oversight [1][2].
  • The PFBR is a 500 MWe sodium‑cooled, MOX‑fuelled prototype; its experience will inform follow‑on commercial fast reactors and the path to thorium deployment in the AHWR and beyond [1][3][6].

Timelines remain multi‑decadal for full thorium deployment: even optimistic projections place large‑scale Stage 3 rollout decades after reliable fast breeder operation and sufficient fissile inventory buildup [3][6].

Practical challenges we must confront

  • Technical: sodium coolant brings excellent heat-transfer and near‑atmospheric operation advantages but is chemically reactive with air and water (sodium fires, sodium–water reactions), and fast‑spectrum cores present unique neutronics and materials stresses (sodium‑void effects, high fluence effects on structural materials) [4].
  • Financial and schedule risk: PFBR experienced long delays and cost escalation during commissioning — realistic budgeting and staged financing are essential for wider deployment [2].
  • Regulatory and safety: fast reactors require robust, transparent regulatory frameworks and site‑specific safety cases; India’s regulator has been updating SFR guidance in recent years to address these unique hazards [5].
  • Fuel cycle and waste: a closed fuel cycle needs industrial‑scale reprocessing and secure management of separated plutonium; handling, safeguards, and public confidence are non‑trivial [4].
  • Public acceptance and workforce: transparent engagement, training of specialists, and clear emergency planning are needed as the technology scales.

Policy recommendations (my practical prescription)

  1. Continue steady, well‑funded commissioning and staged power‑ascension for PFBR with full regulatory transparency — publish test milestones and safety outcomes.
  2. Fund distributed R&D on materials, under‑sodium inspection technologies, and sodium‑fire mitigation to reduce operational risk and lower insurance/financing premiums.
  3. Scale reprocessing and fuel‑fabrication capacity with strict safeguards and international best practices; link fuel‑cycle investments to clear timelines for subsequent commercial fast reactors.
  4. Fast‑track AHWR demonstration and parallel thorium R&D (molten‑salt and accelerator‑driven systems as complementary paths) to diversify pathways to thorium use [6].
  5. Create financing instruments (public‑private risk sharing, green‑bonds for low‑carbon baseload) and policy certainty for multi‑decadal investments.
  6. Integrate nuclear roadmaps with national climate planning: model scenarios where breeders unlock large‑scale low‑carbon power that complements variable renewables.
  7. Prioritize public engagement and workforce development so communities, industries, and regulators grow together with the technology.

A personal closing: why urgency and patience must coexist

Stage 2 criticality at Kalpakkam is momentous. It validates decades of R&D and opens a tangible route toward fuel self‑sufficiency and a thorium‑rich future. But breeding a national energy transition takes technical care, sustained funding, regulatory maturity, and public trust. We must be optimistic — and exacting.

If we get this right, PFBR and its successors can convert India’s resource profile into energy independence and low‑carbon resilience for generations to come. That is why I call on policymakers, industry leaders, scientists, financiers, and civil society to treat this moment not as a finish line but as the start of coordinated delivery.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

References: major factual sources used in this post: PFBR criticality and project milestones [1]; project timeline, cost and commissioning context [2]; India’s three‑stage programme, thorium and AHWR context [3][6]; fast reactor safety and sodium‑coolant challenges [4]; AERB regulatory updates for SFRs [5]; implications for scale and climate [7].

(Bracketed numbers point to the major publicly available reports and press releases corresponding to these topics.)

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Hello Candidates :

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Nashik: TCS Case Update

Nashik: TCS Case Update

Nashik: TCS Case Update

Date: April 2026 Location: Nashik, India

Lede

I have been following the unfolding investigation at a Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) facility in Nashik where multiple employees have filed complaints alleging sexual harassment, coercion and attempts at religious conversion. Police have registered several FIRs and arrested a number of staff; investigators say more women may come forward as the inquiry continues and detectives are actively seeking a suspect’s mobile phone and related digital evidence as part of a wider forensic probe India Today, Economic Times.

Background and timeline

  • Late March 2026: A woman employee approached local police with allegations that led to the first FIR. Following police outreach and counselling, additional employees filed complaints, bringing the total to multiple FIRs registered between March 26 and early April Hindustan Times.
  • Investigating officers subsequently formed a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to coordinate multiple complaints and follow leads inside the office environment Moneycontrol.
  • By mid-April, several employees were suspended by TCS and a number of arrests had been made; police described patterns of alleged targeting involving junior women employees over a period of years, and said elements of the probe used both undercover observation and technical evidence gathering Economic Times, NDTV.

New developments: more employees may come forward

Investigators say initial reluctance among victims gave way after police counselling and outreach; officers have publicly indicated that additional complainants could still emerge as the SIT continues to take statements and examine records. Media coverage has recorded at least eight to nine FIRs so far, with some reporting that young employees in the 18–25 age group were particularly affected Hindustan Times. I note the careful language used by authorities: they stress the possibility of more reports without asserting numbers beyond those formally filed.

Police actions and the hunt for a suspect’s phone

Police say digital evidence is central to the inquiry. Investigators have already analysed phones seized from some of the accused and say images and messages recovered have helped expand the probe; they are also seeking a particular suspect’s mobile device that has not yet been recovered. The SIT has described its approach as combining undercover observation, witness interviews, and digital forensics — including extraction of chat histories, metadata and media files — to corroborate victim accounts and trace networks of communication Economic Times, NDTV.

Forensic steps reported by authorities and media include:

  • Physical seizure and laboratory-style extraction from recovered handsets.
  • Review of messaging app content and group chats for evidence of coordination.
  • Cross-checking call logs, location data and photographs against victim statements.
  • Collaboration with specialised state and central technical agencies when needed Moneycontrol.

I will watch how quickly investigators recover the missing device and what forensic results reveal; that evidence may be crucial to linking accused persons to specific incidents.

Reactions: company, employees and legal perspective

TCS has publicly said it follows a long-standing zero-tolerance policy on harassment, suspended the employees named in investigations, and said it is cooperating with law enforcement while conducting an internal inquiry India Today. Employees and media accounts have described alleged patterns of isolation, confiscation of personal items and pressure on young staff — accounts that prompted urgent police attention and led to the SIT’s formation NDTV.

Legal observers and commentators (speaking in general terms) note multiple potential liabilities: criminal charges under penal statutes cited in FIRs, and corporate compliance scrutiny under the Prevention of Sexual Harassment (POSH) framework if internal complaints were not properly addressed. Authorities have said the SIT is also examining whether organisational procedures were followed Hindustan Times.

Legal and policy implications

  • Criminally, allegations range across sexual assault, stalking, mental harassment and offences related to religious coercion — each carrying distinct investigative and evidentiary demands.
  • Corporately, the case underscores exposure for employers when internal reporting mechanisms fail or are perceived to fail; POSH compliance, timely inquiry, protective measures for complainants and transparent escalation are all in focus.
  • Digital evidence will be pivotal; delay in recovering devices or gaps in logging can hinder prosecutions and internal fact-finding.

Suggested next steps and what to watch for

  • Speed and outcome of forensic analysis of recovered phones and servers. Confirmatory digital traces could produce stronger corroboration across cases.
  • Whether further FIRs and arrests follow as more complainants speak to investigators.
  • The findings and timeline of the company’s internal inquiry and any policy changes TCS announces.
  • Court proceedings on remands, charge-sheets and whether magistrates permit custodial investigations to continue.

Closing

This is a sensitive and evolving matter that combines criminal investigation, workplace governance and public concern. I will continue to follow official filings, forensic updates and credible company statements, while being careful to report only substantiated developments.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Sources: reporting by India Today, Economic Times, Hindustan Times, NDTV and Moneycontrol; details reflect public statements and news coverage as of April 2026. (Where the record is incomplete I have noted the investigatory status rather than speculating.)

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Hello Candidates :

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Thursday, 16 April 2026

Chasing golden skies: Hyderabad photographers find art in sunrise and sunset

Chasing golden skies: Hyderabad photographers find art in sunrise and sunset

The city wakes in layers. Before the traffic and the tea stalls crowd the pavements, Hyderabad’s skies perform a hushed theatre—gold spilling over granite, mist lifting off lakes, minarets and domes sketching silhouettes. For photographers here, chasing these moments is less about cataloguing light and more about listening: to the city’s slow exhale, the rhythm of vendors setting up, the hush of birds over water. This is a short guide and a love letter to those golden hours, with practical advice, local spots, and portraits of three photographers who have made Hyderabad’s dawns and dusks their canvas.

Early Light: What Makes Hyderabad’s Skies Special

Hyderabad nestles between plateaus, lakes, and old stone forts; that geography makes for dramatic low-angle light. The air tends to be clearer right after monsoon and in winter mornings, giving long, warm shadows. At dusk the heat-saturated air often produces rich, saturated colors that linger well after the sun drops behind the horizon. Add to that the city’s mix of modern and historic architecture—glass towers, Qutb Shahi tombs, minarets, and the iconic Hussain Sagar Buddha—and you have an abundance of compositional motifs.

Profiles: Three Photographers Chasing Golden Skies

  • Aisha Khanna — The Humanist Lens

  • Bio: Aisha is a freelance photojournalist who migrated from documentary work to landscape and urban mornings. She balances planned shoots with spontaneous encounters.

  • Approach: Aisha looks for human stories within light—fishermen on Tank Bund, morning ritual at a temple doorway, vendors setting up under a rosy sky. She favors wide apertures for subject separation and shoots in RAW to balance dynamic range while keeping ambient skin tones accurate.

  • Ramesh “Ramu” Patel — The Color Minimalist

  • Bio: Ramu started as a wedding photographer and now curates a popular Instagram feed dedicated to Hyderabad skies. His work is notable for bold colors and minimalist compositions.

  • Approach: He simplifies scenes—isolating silhouettes against gradated skies, using long exposures at dusk to smooth water and accentuate reflections. Ramu frequently uses graduated ND filters and bracketed exposures for HDR when dynamic range gets extreme.

  • Sana Mirza — The Architectural Storyteller

  • Bio: Sana is an architect-turned-photographer focused on the interplay between built spaces and natural light, especially during golden and blue hours.

  • Approach: Sana scouts locations days ahead, studies sun paths, and frames scenes to emphasize leading lines and geometry—arches, staircases, fort ramparts—often combining a telephoto lens for compressed perspectives with a tripod for precise compositions.

Best Sunrise and Sunset Locations in Hyderabad

  • Qutb Shahi Tombs (Sunrise)

  • Why go: The tomb complex sits on slightly elevated ground with open sightlines, making it perfect for a warm, classical sunrise with domes and palms backlit. Early morning devotees are few, giving you space to compose.

  • Hussain Sagar & Tank Bund (Sunrise and Sunset)

  • Why go: The lake reflects the sky—ideal for symmetrical compositions and long exposures. The Buddha statue offers a distinctive subject. Mornings show fishermen and walkers; evenings bring couples and city lights.

  • Golkonda Fort (Sunset)

  • Why go: The fort’s ramparts provide panoramic views of the western horizon. Sunset silhouettes the fort’s crenellations and the cityscape, producing dramatic foregrounds for sun bursts.

  • Durgam Cheruvu / Secret Lake (Sunset)

  • Why go: Smaller and calmer than Hussain Sagar, Durgam offers wooded banks and interesting reflections. The surrounding glass-and-stone contrasts well with warm light.

  • Birla Mandir (Sunrise)

  • Why go: Elevated marble terraces capture soft morning light. The temple’s white surfaces glow at dawn, and the city below slowly brightens.

  • KBR National Park & Jubilee Hills (Sunrise)

  • Why go: For birdlife, fog veils, and a slice of urban nature. Good for intimate nature shots in early light and for photographing walkers and runners framed by golden shafts of sun.

  • Charminar & Old City (Sunset)

  • Why go: The narrow lanes and bustling bazaars light up with neon and ambient colors after sunset, while the monument itself becomes a dramatic silhouette—great for moody street-architecture combinations.

Technical Tips for Capturing Sunrises and Sunsets in Hyderabad

Gear essentials

  • Camera: Any DSLR, mirrorless, or even a capable smartphone. Full-frame bodies give smoother noise in low light, but APS-C and phones can excel with good technique.
  • Lenses: 16–35mm (wide) for landscapes and reflections; 24–70mm for versatility; 70–200mm or 85mm for compressed skylines and distant architectural details.
  • Tripod: Indispensable for long exposures and precise framing in low light.
  • Filters: Circular polarizer to reduce glare and deepen skies; graduated ND for balancing bright skies and darker foregrounds; neutral density for long exposures at dusk.

Camera settings and workflows

  • Shoot RAW: To retain highlight and shadow detail for post-processing.
  • Bracket exposures: Take a series (e.g., -2, 0, +2 EV) when contrast is high; merge later for balanced final images.
  • Aperture: f/8–f/11 for landscape sharpness; f/2.8–f/4 for subject isolation in human-interest shots.
  • ISO: Keep it as low as practicable (100–400) to minimize noise.
  • Shutter: Use longer shutter speeds for silky water/reflections at sunset; use faster speeds to freeze movement if you’re capturing people or birds.
  • White Balance: Auto often works, but try ‘Daylight’ or set a custom Kelvin for warmer tones. Tweak in RAW during editing.
  • Focus: Use single-point AF for manual subjects; for landscapes, focus ~1/3 into the scene or use hyperfocal focusing.

Composition & timing

  • Golden hour vs blue hour: Golden hour (just after sunrise or before sunset) gives warm tones; blue hour (the dimmer time after sunset or before sunrise) yields deep blues and great city lighting—both are worth staying for.
  • Use reflections: Hyderabad’s lakes and reservoirs are perfect for symmetrical compositions—look for still water patches.
  • Foreground interest: Add boats, walls, arches, or people to anchor wide vistas.
  • Sun position apps: Use PhotoPills, Sun Surveyor, or Google’s sun calculator to predict sun angle, golden hour times, and where exactly it will rise/set relative to landmarks.

Cultural Context: Dawn, Dusk, and Local Life

Sunrise and sunset in Hyderabad are woven into daily rituals. Temples and mosques call faithfuls with bells and azaan; markets assemble their stalls at first light; chai vendors prepare the morning brew for thousands of commuters. During festivals—Ramadan, Bonalu, Ganesh Chaturthi—the light takes on an added layer as lamps, processions, and decorative illuminations interact with natural color. Photographers sensitive to these contexts can capture scenes that are both visually striking and culturally resonant. Be respectful: ask permission before photographing people involved in prayers or private rituals.

Practical Considerations and Safety

  • Arrive early: Gates close at some heritage sites; many photographers reach locations 30–60 minutes before sunrise.
  • Permissions: For tripods or commercial shoots at heritage sites like Golkonda, check local rules and obtain permits if necessary.
  • Weather: Hyderabad’s best skies often follow clear nights—check forecasts and local haze conditions. Monsoon and post-monsoon days can offer the most dramatic color.
  • Respect the city: Don’t block pathways, disturb locals, or leave behind waste.

Closing Reflection: Light and the Art of Patience

Photographing Hyderabad’s dawns and dusks is as much an exercise in patience as in technique. The best photographs rarely arrive instantly; they are earned through repeated visits, quiet observation, and the willingness to return when the light shifts. The city rewards those who wait: a fisherman’s silhouette aligning with a sunbeam, a fort wall igniting in orange, a market that seems to glow from within. In a city that moves fast, golden hours are reminders to slow down. To chase golden skies in Hyderabad is to learn to see the ordinary reshaped by light—and to discover that the most compelling frames often come when you simply stand and watch the day begin or end.

If you plan a sunrise or sunset shoot in Hyderabad, go prepared, go early, and stay a little longer than you think you need. The light will repay you.

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"Why are Qutb Shahi Tombs and Golkonda Fort especially good locations for sunrise and sunset photography in Hyderabad?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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Glow-Up Picks 2026

Glow-Up Picks 2026

Why I’m excited about Glow Up Days (and you should be too)

I love a good sale day — not because discounts are thrilling (they are), but because events like Myntra’s Glow Up Days make experimentation less scary. This mid‑April moment is where shoppers restock staples, try a new serum, or finally grab that sunscreen they’ve been meaning to test. In 2026 the sale is clearly leaning into skincare as ritual + science, which is exactly my kind of shopping mood.Myntra Glow Up Days sale begins today: Get up to 70% off on trending makeup and beauty

Three trends defining routines in 2026

  • Glass skin, reimagined: the goal is no longer “reflective” alone but smooth, hydrated, and non‑oily luminosity. Think lightweight layers that blur texture without heavy makeup.
  • Bond builders (peptides / amino acid / bonder tech): products that claim to support skin structure and resiliency are showing up as serums and actives positioned between exfoliation and repair.
  • Barrier care and microbiome‑friendly formulas: ceramides, prebiotics, and gentle humectants are front and center, appealing to shoppers who want long‑term skin health, not overnight miracles.

Product categories I’m adding to my cart (features, not brands)

  • Lightweight ceramide creams — rich in barrier lipids but breathable, often oil‑free or emollient‑balanced.
  • Peptide bond builders — concentrated peptide blends or peptide + hyaluronic acid serums; aim for short peptide lists and clear concentration notes.
  • Exfoliating acids — AHA (glycolic/lactic) and BHA (salicylic) in controlled concentrations and pH‑balanced formulas for at‑home resurfacing.
  • Vitamin C serums — look for stabilized derivatives and antioxidant pairings (e.g., vitamin E, ferulic acid analogs) for daytime glow.
  • Hydration mists & humectant serums — lightweight hyaluronic acid, glycerin, and polyglutamic acid textures for layering.
  • Sunscreens — broad spectrum, cosmetically elegant formulations (look for lightweight gel/serum SPFs in hot months).
  • Sheet masks — quick hydration boosts with simple ingredient decks; perfect for a pre‑event glow.
  • Cleansing balms — gentle oil cleansers that remove sunscreen and makeup without stripping.

I’m especially curious about the new “bonder tech” launches — formulations marketed to support extracellular matrix interactions. They’re not a replacement for retinoids or sunscreen, but they can be a nice complement if you’re building a thoughtful routine.

Quick routines — realistic, 2–3 steps each

Morning (fast, effective)

  • Hydrating cleanser or splash rinse
  • Lightweight vitamin C or peptide serum + moisturizer with ceramides
  • Broad‑spectrum sunscreen (SPF 30–50)

Night (repair and restore)

  • Cleansing balm or gentle cleanser
  • Bond builder or targeted serum (peptide/AA tech) — alternate with exfoliant nights
  • Ceramide cream or richer moisturizer

Tip: I alternate exfoliating acid nights with bond‑builder nights rather than layering them together.

Shopping smart during Glow Up Days

  • Look for curated bundles — combo kits often give better value and let you test full routines.
  • Filter by skin concern (sensitivity, hydration, oily/blemish‑prone) — this saves time and reduces impulse buys.
  • Use reviews thoughtfully — look for photos, long‑form reviews, and people with similar skin types/tones.
  • Check ingredient lists — short, transparent decks are easier to troubleshoot.
  • Search for cruelty‑free and sustainable packaging tags if those matter to you; many listings now include such filters.
  • Watch for price drops, flash deals, and early‑hour “happy hours” — popular items sell out fast.
  • If you’re stacking coupons, test final checkout prices before hitting buy; gift‑card promos or bank discounts can be the difference between “nice” and “steal.”

What to watch out for — safety and expectations

  • Active combinations: be cautious combining retinoids with AHAs/BHAs in the same routine. That can irritate the barrier. Instead, alternate nights or use lower concentrations.
  • Patch test new actives: a 24–72 hour patch on the inner forearm or behind the ear helps spot sensitivities before full‑face use.
  • No quick fixes: glass skin is often the sum of consistent hydration, gentle exfoliation, and sun protection — not a single miracle product.
  • Read claims critically: terms like “bond builder” or “microbiome support” are popular marketing hooks. Look for ingredient transparency and concentrations where possible.

Sustainability and affordability notes

This year feels like “affordable luxe” meets responsible design: silk‑finish textures and recyclable packaging at accessible price points. If sustainability matters to you, prioritize refillable formats, recyclable cartons, and brands that publish ingredient sourcing details.

A few final, friendly reminders

  • Be inclusive in your choices: formulations now consider varied skin tones and types — look for universal shade ranges and non‑flashback SPFs.
  • If a product sounds too good to be true (instant structural repair overnight), approach with curiosity and skepticism.
  • Glow Up Days are a great time to experiment, but keep receipts and check return policies in case a product doesn’t suit your skin.

If you’re like me, you’ll come away with a mix of sensible re‑stocks (sunscreen, ceramide cream) and one or two fun experiments (a peptide booster or a lightweight gel SPF). That’s the joy of these sale moments: you get to refine what your skin actually needs — and maybe discover a new favourite.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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Crowded Skies, Tight Turns

Crowded Skies, Tight Turns

Opening: a sky that feels smaller

Last year I found myself staring at a graph of near‑miss alerts and thinking: we are treating low Earth orbit like a busy roundabout with no traffic lights. The headline figure — about 1.5 lakh (150,000) collision or conjunction alerts issued for Indian satellites in 2025 — jolted me the same way. It’s not a doomsday number so much as a practical alarm: our orbital neighbourhood is busier, messier and harder to manage than most of us realise.

In this piece I want to explain what those alerts mean, why the count spiked, what satellite operators and services face, and what this all means for you and me.

What is a conjunction / collision alert?

A conjunction alert (sometimes called a close‑approach alert) is a warning that two objects in orbit — an operational satellite, a spent rocket body, or a fragment of debris — may pass very close to one another. Think of it like an ATC warning in the sky: the prediction says “there is a risk, please check and respond.”

Key details in an alert:

  • predicted closest approach distance (often measured in metres to kilometres)
  • time of closest approach (UTC)
  • probability estimate of collision (from vanishingly small to alarmingly high)
  • confidence level, based on tracking quality

Not every alert becomes a manoeuvre. Most are triaged by analysts who refine orbits using better data, and a small fraction require a collision avoidance manoeuvre (CAM).

Why 1.5 lakh alerts for Indian satellites in 2025?

Several forces combined to produce that large number. They are not mutually exclusive — they amplifed each other.

  • Launch surge: 2025 was a banner year for launches globally. Hundreds of rideshare missions and constellation deployments placed thousands of objects into LEO in short windows, creating dense clusters of satellites and shorter reaction times.

  • Crowded LEO and clustered deployments: Constellations are often deployed in batches of dozens or hundreds. When dozens of satellites are injected into similar planes and altitudes, screening systems generate many more potential close approaches.

  • Growing debris population: Legacy debris — from fragmentation events, old rocket stages, and mission leftovers — remains in the same orbital bands satellites use. Even tiny fragments can trigger alerts because relative speeds are very high.

  • Better sensors and alerting: Tracking networks and conjunction‑assessment tools are improving. That means more potential conjunctions are detected and reported. In other words, some of the increase is good: we’re seeing risks we might once have missed.

  • International alerting protocols: Many alerts came from multinational tracking centres such as the Combined Space Operations Center (CSpOC) under USSPACECOM. Operators who subscribe to these services receive high volumes of automated warnings.

Put together, these causes turned a manageable trickle of alerts into a steady stream — and for large operators and national agencies the numbers add up quickly.

Implications for satellite operators and services

Operators now face both technical and operational pressures:

  • Increased monitoring load: Flight dynamics teams must review far more conjunctions, often within tight time windows.

  • Fuel and lifetime tradeoffs: Each evasive CAM burns propellant. Frequent manoeuvres reduce a satellite’s operational lifetime or force earlier decommissioning.

  • Complexity of planning: Maneuvers must avoid creating new conjunction risks (post‑burn close approaches), so operators revise manoeuvre plans more often.

  • Service continuity risk: Critical services — Earth observation passes, communications handovers, timing signals — can be disrupted when satellites alter orbits.

Real examples from 2025/2026 saw dozens of revised manoeuvre plans and a small number of executed CAMs; operators increasingly folded risk mitigation into routine orbit maintenance to save fuel and avoid service interruptions.

Mitigation strategies (what operators can do)

Short and medium term:

  • Collision avoidance manoeuvres: Intentional, calculated burns to shift a satellite’s orbit by tens to hundreds of metres.

  • Improved conjunction assessment: Use operational ephemerides (precise orbit data) and larger screening volumes to reduce false alarms.

  • Traffic coordination: Share planned manoeuvres in advance with other operators to avoid post‑burn collisions.

Longer term and design choices:

  • Satellites designed with more propellant margin and more efficient propulsion (e.g., electric thrust) to sustain multiple CAMs.

  • Passive safety features: de‑orbit sails, drag augmentation devices, and standardised disposal orbits at end of life.

  • Hardened, redundant service architectures: using distributed constellations so loss or temporary repositioning of a single satellite doesn’t cause service failure.

Policy and international coordination

This problem cannot be solved by one agency. It needs norms, transparency and shared infrastructure:

  • Mandatory post‑mission disposal standards and debris mitigation rules.

  • Timely sharing of manoeuvre intent and ephemerides across operators and national agencies.

  • A neutral or multinational traffic‑management forum and standardised communications protocols to avoid ambiguity.

  • Investment in global space‑traffic‑management (STM) capabilities: more radars, more optical telescopes, and better data fusion.

I’ve written before about the need to think of space infrastructure the way we think of transport systems on Earth — with rules, enforcement and public goods — and the recent alert volumes only underline that point ISRO NavIC - India Transport Revolution.

What this means for everyday users

Most people will not notice alerts directly — they don’t show up on your phone as a warning. But the effects are real:

  • Slightly higher risk of service outages: Earth observation images, satellite internet, weather data and navigation corrections could see brief interruptions if a satellite has to manoeuvre.

  • Higher costs over time: Operators facing more manoeuvres and shorter lifetimes may pass on costs, which can translate into higher prices for satellite internet, imagery or downstream services.

  • Improved safety and resilience: On the bright side, more rigorous tracking and coordination means fewer catastrophic collisions and less chance of cascading debris (a Kessler‑type cascade) that would be bad for everyone.

My closing thought

Space used to feel like a boundless ocean. Today it feels more like a city seen from above at rush hour — beautiful, useful, and increasingly in need of governance. The 1.5 lakh alerts for Indian satellites in 2025 are a practical alarm bell: we can build safer skies, but it will take better tracking, smarter design, international cooperation and, crucially, the political will to treat orbital traffic as a shared resource.

I’ve argued before that technology without coordination creates fragility. The coming decade will test whether our institutions can match the pace of launches and keep the orbital commons open for innovation.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What is a conjunction alert and why did Indian satellites receive about 1.5 lakh such alerts in 2025?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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