NASA astronaut Dr Anil Menon of Kerala roots set for ISS mission
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
NASA astronaut Dr Anil Menon, whose family hails from Ottapalam in Palakkad district, Kerala, is set to launch to the International Space Station (ISS) on Tuesday, 14 July, aboard the Soyuz MS-29 spacecraft. The liftoff is scheduled for 8.17 pm IST from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, marking the beginning of an eight-month mission that will see the crew return to Earth in April 2026.
Who Is Dr Anil Menon
Dr Menon is the son of Shankaran Menon of Ottapalam and Elizabeth Samoylenko of Ukraine. Before earning his place in NASA's astronaut corps, he built a formidable career spanning medicine, mechanical engineering, and military aviation — serving as a US Space Force flight surgeon and pilot. His selection as an astronaut represents the culmination of a career defined by cross-disciplinary excellence.
This is his first spaceflight. His primary focus aboard the ISS will be research into the medical challenges of long-duration human space travel — findings that are expected to inform future missions beyond low Earth orbit, including eventual lunar and deep-space endeavours.
The Mission and Crew
Dr Menon will travel to the ISS alongside Russian cosmonauts Pyotr Dubrov and Anna Kikina. The crew is scheduled to conduct a series of scientific experiments during their stay at the station. Hours before the scheduled liftoff, Menon shared his readiness on social media, expressing gratitude to NASA, his family, and friends for their support throughout his preparation.
Kerala and Palakkad's Legacy of Achievers
For Kerala — and Palakkad in particular — Dr Menon's mission adds a landmark chapter to an already distinguished legacy. The district has produced a remarkable range of national and global figures: legendary actor-politician and former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.G. Ramachandran; diplomat, author, and parliamentarian Shashi Tharoor, whose family has roots in Palakkad; and Kalamandalam Ramankutty Nair, one of Kathakali's greatest exponents and a former Principal of the Kerala Kalamandalam.
Notably, Air Commodore Prasanth Balakrishnan Nair, a flight instructor with the Indian Air Force and a 'Gaganyatri' (astronaut) with the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), also hails from Palakkad — making Dr Menon's launch the second time in recent years that the district has a direct connection to human spaceflight.
What the Mission Means for India
Dr Menon's voyage is a moment of quiet national significance. As India accelerates its own human spaceflight ambitions under the Gaganyaan programme, the medical research Dr Menon conducts aboard the ISS on the physiological effects of extended space missions could offer insights relevant to ISRO's long-term planning. This comes amid growing international collaboration in space science, with India increasingly positioning itself as a key partner in low Earth orbit and beyond.
With the Soyuz MS-29 set to carry Dr Menon skyward on Tuesday evening, Palakkad's tradition of producing world-class achievers has, quite literally, reached beyond the skies.