GalaxEye Drishti: India’s Largest Private Satellite Blazes a New Trail in SpaceTech
India’s private space ecosystem has taken a giant leap forward with Bengaluru‑based GalaxEye Space launching “Mission Drishti,” the country’s largest privately built satellite, into orbit. The 190 kg spacecraft rode a SpaceX Falcon‑9 rocket into space on May 3, 2026, opening a new chapter for homegrown spacetech startups that are now building systems once reserved for national space agencies.
What sets Drishti apart is that it is the world’s first OptoSAR satellite, merging optical, multi‑spectral and synthetic aperture radar (SAR) sensors on a single platform. This fusion lets it capture sharp images both by day and night, even through thick clouds, smoke, and rain, delivering reliable Earth‑observation data when traditional optical satellites fall short.
Drishti also packs an onboard AI engine powered by NVIDIA Jetson Orin hardware, allowing it to crunch image data in space before sending it to the ground. This edge‑processing capability reduces latency and bandwidth needs, making it especially useful for defence, maritime monitoring, disaster response, agriculture, and infrastructure planning.
GalaxEye plans to grow Drishti into a larger constellation, eyeing up to 10 satellites over the coming years as part of an ambitious orbital data‑services platform. By blending cutting‑edge hardware with AI‑driven analytics, the company is positioning India not just as a launch‑service destination, but as a key supplier of intelligent, high‑resolution Earth‑observation data on the global stage.