Positioning Capability of India’s
Indigenous Navigation System, ‘Navigation with Indian Constellation’,
Compromised
India’s indigenous navigation system, Navigation with
Indian Constellation (NavIC), has suffered another setback after the failure of
the atomic clock onboard IRNSS-1F, leading to the loss of its positioning
capability. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) recently confirmed
that the last functional atomic clock onboard IRNSS-1F stopped working on March
13, 2026. The satellite, launched in March 2016, had already completed its
design mission life of 10 years, and had been operating with only one working
clock out of three for some time. Though it can continue one-way messaging services,
it can no longer provide Position, Navigation and Timing (PNT) services. With
this failure, only three satellites (IRNSS-1B, IRNSS-1L, NVS-01) are currently
providing navigation services. Minimum four satellites are required for
effective navigation coverage, raising concerns over service reliability.
NavIC (IRNSS)
¨
NavIC (Navigation with
Indian Constellation), originally known as the Indian Regional Navigation
Satellite System (IRNSS), is India’s indigenous satellite-based navigation
system developed by ISRO.
¨
The system was conceived
in the aftermath of the 1999 Kargil War, when India faced denial of access to
the U.S.-controlled GPS, highlighting the strategic need for an independent
navigation capability.
¨ NavIC was designed as a
regional navigation system consisting of seven satellites, intended to provide
accurate positioning services over the entire Indian landmass, and up to 1,500
km beyond India’s borders.
¨
Unlike global systems
such as GPS, NavIC satellites are placed in geosynchronous orbits directly
above the Indian region, ensuring better signal availability and accuracy,
especially in challenging terrains like mountain valleys, forests, and dense
urban areas.
¨
The system is capable of
providing location accuracy of around 10 metres, making it highly reliable for
both civilian and strategic applications.
¨
Applications: Navigation
(land, air, sea), Disaster management, Vehicle tracking, Military operations,
Mapping & geodesy, and timing for telecom & financial systems.
¨
The newer generation of
satellites has introduced L1 frequency signals, in addition to L5 and S bands,
enabling better interoperability with global systems like GPS and wider
adoption in consumer devices.
Current and Earlier Operational Satellites
India has launched around 11 satellites under the
NavIC programme since 2013, but the constellation has faced persistent
reliability issues.
¨
Only four were fully
operational for PNT services,
¨
Four were being used for
message broadcasting,
¨
One had been
decommissioned, and
¨
Two had failed to reach
their intended orbit.
At present, the satellites capable of
providing navigation (PNT) services are:
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IRNSS-1B
¨
IRNSS-1L (replacement
satellite)
¨
NVS-01 (IRNSS-1J,
second-generation satellite)
Earlier satellites such as IRNSS-1A, 1C, 1D, 1E, and
1G suffered failures primarily due to atomic clock malfunctions. IRNSS-1F is
the latest addition to this list. The latest failure is expected to impact
critical applications such as railway tracking, aviation navigation, disaster
response, and military operations, where NavIC has been increasingly
integrated.