Skyroot Aerospace founders: How two IIT-ISRO alumni built India's first private orbital rocket
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Pawan Kumar Chandana and Naga Bharath Daka, two former Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) scientists, co-founded Skyroot Aerospace in Hyderabad in 2018 with a singular goal: make satellite launches as routine and affordable as commercial air travel. That vision has since translated into India's first private orbital launch, the Vikram-1 mission, marking a watershed moment for the country's emerging commercial space sector.
The Founders and Their Roles
Chandana serves as Chief Executive Officer and Daka as Chief Operating Officer, together steering a workforce of more than 1,000 professionals across rocket design, propulsion, avionics, and launch systems. Their complementary expertise — Chandana in launch vehicle structures and Daka in avionics — has been central to Skyroot's technical identity.
Pawan Kumar Chandana: From IIT Kharagpur to ISRO
Chandana cleared the IIT entrance examination in his first attempt and enrolled at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kharagpur. Resisting the pull of high-paying technology-sector jobs that claimed many of his peers, he pursued his passion for rocketry and was recruited by ISRO directly from campus.
At ISRO, Chandana spent six years at the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre in Thiruvananthapuram, contributing to the development of the GSLV Mk III — India's heaviest operational launch vehicle. His work earned him an internal innovation award, and the hands-on experience with large cryogenic systems gave him the technical foundation to later design Skyroot's own rocket family.
Naga Bharath Daka: Avionics Architect
Daka is an alumnus of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras, holding a master's degree in Microelectronics and VLSI Design alongside a bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering. Before co-founding Skyroot, he worked as a flight computer engineer at ISRO, where he designed and developed multiple avionics modules for Indian launch vehicles.
His deep expertise in semiconductor technologies and FPGA (Field-Programmable Gate Array) systems has been instrumental in building the avionics stack that guides Skyroot's Vikram rocket series. This is the kind of specialised, mission-critical engineering that typically takes decades to develop within a national space agency — Daka and his team compressed that timeline significantly within a private-sector framework.
Why the Vikram-1 Mission Matters
India's private space sector was opened to commercial players only after the government reformed its space policy framework, creating IN-SPACe as the regulatory and promotional body. Skyroot became one of the first beneficiaries of that liberalisation, and the Vikram-1 orbital launch is the clearest proof yet that the policy shift is producing real outcomes.
This comes amid a broader global race in small-satellite launch services, where companies like Rocket Lab and SpaceX have already established commercial footholds. India's entry through a homegrown private player — rather than a public sector agency — signals a structural shift in how the country intends to compete in the $500-billion global space economy.
What Comes Next for Skyroot
With the Vikram-1 orbital mission now completed, Skyroot is expected to pursue commercial launch contracts for small satellite operators, both domestic and international. The company's roadmap reportedly includes higher-capacity variants of the Vikram rocket series, designed to serve a growing pipeline of earth-observation and communications satellites. Industry observers note that sustained launch cadence — not a single headline mission — will determine whether Skyroot can convert this milestone into a durable business.