Upcoming Mentoring Sessions
RMS - Indian Society
News Reading Hour
RMS - Disaster Management
RMS - Environment
RMS - Internal Security - Part II
RMS - Internal Security - Part I
RMS - Social Justice - Part III
RMS - Social Justice - Part II
RMS - Social Justice - Part I
RMS - International Relations
RMS - Governance - Part II
RMS - Governance - Part I
Mentorship Program Introductory Session
RMS - Indian Physiography - Archipelagos of India
RMS - Indian Physiography - Coastal Plains of India
RMS - Art & Culture - Bhakti Movement
RMS - Polity - Elections & Political Parties
RMS - Indian Physiography - The Great Indian Desert
Step-Up RMS - Economic Survey and Budget : Part - 2
Step-Up RMS - Resources - Forests, Soils, Minerals etc : Part - 2
Step-Up RMS - Environment and Biodiversity Current Affairs : Part - 2
Step-Up RMS - History : 1935 - Independence
Step-Up RMS - Science and Technology Current affairs - Part - 2
Step-Up RMS - History : 1921 - 1935
RMS - A&C - Current Affairs
RMS - Indian Physiography - Peninsular Plateau
RMS - Polity - Services under the Union and the States & Pressure Groups
RMS - Economy - Balance of Payments
RMS - Economy - Trade & Important Government Schemes
RMS - Modern History - 1830 AD to 1857 AD
RMS - Economy - Fiscal Policy & Budgeting
RMS - Economy - Inflation
RMS - Polity - Local-Self Government & Co-Operative Societies
Step-Up RMS - Environment and Biodiversity Current Affairs : Part - 1
Step-Up RMS - Science and Technology Current affairs - Part - 1
Step-Up RMS -History : 1906 - 1920
Step-Up RMS - History 1857-1905
Step-Up RMS - Geomorphology - Types and Distribution
Step-Up RMS - Evolution + Interior of earth + oceanography
Step-Up RMS - History - Constitutional reforms
Step-Up RMS - Medieval History - kingdom chronology + terminology (Part - 2)
RMS - Indian Physiography - The Great North Indian Plain
RMS - Indian Physiography - Intro & The Himalayas
Step-Up RMS - Indian geography - location , landforms
Step-Up RMS - Drainage system + Rivers (India and world)
RMS - Art & Culture - South India
RMS - Economy - Taxation
RMS - Economy - Money and Banking - Part II
RMS - Polity - Union Legislature - Part III
Step-Up RMS – Indian Culture: Architecture + Literature (Part-2)
Step-Up RMS - Human geography
Step-Up RMS - Delhi sultanate + mughal administration
Step-Up RMS - Resources - Forests, Soils, Minerals etc
Step-Up RMS - Climatology + Indian monsoon
Step-Up RMS - Medieval History - kingdom chronology + terminology
Step-Up RMS - Indian school of philosophy -Buddhism & Jainism
Step-Up RMS - Indian Culture : Architecture + literature
Step-Up RMS - Ancient history - chronology + terminology
Step-Up RMS - Economic Survey and Budget
Step-Up RMS - Polity - Miscl-Imp Judgements , Amendments, Miscl concepts etc
Step-Up RMS - Agriculture and related concepts
Step-Up RMS - Polity - Constitutional and Non-Constitutional Bodies
Step-Up RMS - Economics - External Sector
Step-Up RMS - Polity - Judiciary- SC/HC/Lower courts
Step-Up RMS - Economics - Fiscal policy and Financial Markets
Step-Up RMS - Polity - Parliament and State Legislature
Step-Up RMS - Economics - Money and Banking
Step-Up RMS - Polity - Union and State Executives
Step-Up RMS - Economics - Basic Economics and Terminology
Step-Up RMS - Polity - State, Citizenship, FR/FD and Emergency Provisions
RMS - Polity - Judiciary - Part II
RMS - Geography - Biomes and Natural Resources
RMS - Economy - Money and Banking - Part I
RMS - Geography - Oceanography
RMS - Medieval History - 646 AD to 1192 AD
RMS - Art & Culture - Post Mauryan Period
RMS - Polity - Union Legislature - Part II
RMS - Economy - Financial Markets
RMS - Polity - Judiciary Part I
RMS - Polity - Separation of Powers & Federal System
RMS - Geography - Atmospheric Circulation
RMS - Polity - Union Legislature - Part I
RMS - Geography - Air Mass, Fronts & Cyclones
RMS - A&C - Pre-Historic to Mauryan Period
RMS - Economy - Fundamentals of Economy & NIA
RMS - Polity - Emergency Provisions
RMS - Geography - Humidity, Clouds & Precipitation
RMS - Economy - Demography, Poverty & Employment
RMS - Modern History - 1813 AD to 1857 AD
RMS - Polity - Union & State Executive
RMS - Modern History - 1932 AD to 1947 AD
RMS - Geography - Basics of Atmosphere
RMS - Polity - Fundamental Rights - Part III
RMS - Economy - Planning and Mobilisation of Resources
RMS - Modern History - 1919 AD to 1932 AD
RMS - Modern History - 1757 AD to 1813 AD
RMS - Economy - Financial Organisations
RMS - Geography - Major Landforms
RMS - Polity - Constitutional and Statutory Bodies
RMS - Geography - EQ, Faulting and Fracture
RMS - Polity - Fundamental Rights - Part II
RMS - Economy - Industry, Infrastructure & Investment Models
RMS - Polity - DPSP & FD
RMS - Economy - Indian Agriculture - Part II
RMS - Geography - Rocks & Volcanoes and its landforms
RMS - Geography - Evolution of Oceans & Continents
RMS - Polity - Fundamental Rights - Part I
RMS - Modern History - 1498 AD to 1757 AD
RMS - Modern History - 1858 AD to 1919 AD
RMS - Geography - Interior of the Earth & Geomorphic Processes
RMS - Geography - Universe and Earth and Basic concepts on Earth
RMS - Economy - Indian Agriculture - Part I
RMS - Economy - Fundamentals of the Indian Economy
RMS - Polity - Union & its territories and Citizenship
RMS - Polity - Constitution & its Salient Features and Preamble
Learning Support Session - ANSWER writing MASTER Session
Learning Support Session - How to Read Newspaper?
Mastering Art of writing Ethics Answers
Mastering Art of Writing Social Issues Answers
Answer Review Session
UPSC CSE 2026 Form Filling Doubt Session
Mentoring Session (2024 - 25) - How to Write an ESSAY?
Social Issues Doubts and Mentoring Session
Ethics & Essay Doubts and Mentoring Session
Geography & Environment Doubts and Mentoring Session
History Doubts and Mentoring Session
Economy & Agriculture Doubts and Mentoring Session
Online Orientation Session
How to Read Newspaper and Make Notes?
Mains Support Programme 2026-27
Mains Support Programme 2025- (1)
Polity & International Relations Doubts and Mentoring Session
Mentoring Sessions (2024-25) - How to DO REVISION?
Learning Support Session - How to Start Preparation?
RMS - Geography - World Mapping
Mentoring Session (2024-25) - How to Make Notes?
General Mentoring Session (GMS )
Mentoring Session (2025-26) - How to write an Answer?
Upcoming Live Classes
UPSC 2027: Complete Strategy for Working Professionals
Start Time : July 13, 2026, 5:30 p.m.
Teacher : Vajiram And Ravi
Subject : General Studies
Smart Current Affairs Experience Session for UPSC 2027
Start Time : July 14, 2026, 5:30 p.m.
Teacher : Jayant Parikshit
Subject : Current Affairs
"श्योर शॉट मेन्स प्रोग्राम 2027" - "अब हिंदी माध्यम में भी"
Start Time : July 15, 2026, 5:30 p.m.
Teacher : Vajiram And Ravi
Subject : General Studies
Announcement
11 hours ago
Dear Aspirant,
The Scholarship Test for SMART Current Affairs Programme 2027 is going to be held on 12th July 2026 (Sunday), 9:00 AM – 11:00 AM. Stand a chance to earn up to 50% merit-based scholarship.
📍 Offline Venue: 7B, Hall No. 1, Vajiram & Ravi
💻 Attempt Online: https://vajiramias.com/test-series/smart-current-affairs-open-test/685a39f74f1b74504708a71a/
Announcement
11 hours ago
Dear Aspirant,
We are going to conduct the UPSC 2027 Complete Strategy for Working Professionals session by Mr. Shashank Gupta, Programme Head – StepUp Mentorship Programme, on 13th July 2026 at 5:30 PM.
Register here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdUvAe3A8_65-HkLYMutHXWaSIvx245sQW0bvLusyPAsv-3MQ/viewform
Current Affairs
July 11, 2026
About Molluscs:
- Molluscs are extremely diverse invertebrate animals.
- Habitat: They are found in nearly all freshwater and marine environments, and some are found also on land.
- They come in all shapes and sizes, and some of them grow external shells to protect their soft bodies.
- These are a quarter of all living marine species and also have importance as food sources.
- The molluscs include many familiar animals, including clams, snails, slugs, and squid, as well as some less familiar animals, like tusk shells and chitons.
- Major groups within the Mollusca
- Polyplacophora: It consists of chitons, snail-like molluscs with eight-part overlapping scale shells
- Gastropoda: These are true snails and slugs. They represent the most diverse class within phylum Mollusca with 60,000 to 80,000 extant species in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial habitats.
- Bivalvia: These are molluscs with hinged two-part shells. Examples include clams, oysters, mussels, and scallops.
- Cephalopoda: These are molluscs with large heads, large eyes, and grasping tentacles
- Examples include octopus, squid, cuttlefish, and nautiloids.
Current Affairs
July 11, 2026
About Cyanobacteria:
- These are also called blue-green algae, microscopic organisms found naturally in all types of water.
- They have the distinction of being the oldest known fossils, more than 3.5 billion years old.
- Habitat: These single-celled organisms live in fresh, brackish (combined salt and fresh water), and marine water.
- Characteristics of cyanobacteria:
- Autotrophs: All cyanobacteria are autotrophs, meaning they produce their own energy by photosynthesizing sunlight. Cyanobacteria are a very old group of organisms.
- Reproduction in Cyanobacteria: Cyanobacteria also reproduce asexually and the commonest mode of reproduction in them is transverse binary fission.
- Some are solitary others are colonial and few cyanobacteria produce toxins.
- Cyanobacteria blooms can form in warm, slow-moving waters that are rich in nutrients from sources such as fertilizer runoff or septic tank overflows.
- In warm, nutrient-rich environments, microscopic cyanobacteria can grow quickly, creating blooms that spread across the water’s surface and may become visible.
Current Affairs
July 11, 2026
About Samriddh Gram:
- It is a flagship rural digital transformation initiative of the Department of Telecommunications built on the BharatNet network.
- Objective: It is envisaged as a pioneering phygital (physical + digital) Services model integrating on-ground presence with robust digital infrastructure to empower rural citizens.
- It is aimed at transforming rural India through a seamless integration of physical and digital services.
- At the heart of the initiative are Samriddhi Kendras, established as one-stop village-level hubs delivering integrated phygital services by combining reliable telecom connectivity, digital platforms and assisted physical service delivery.
- The Samriddhi Kendras will deliver a comprehensive suite of services
- Education & Skilling: Smart classrooms, AR/VR-based learning, and digital skilling aligned with government schemes/initiatives.
- Agriculture: IoT-based soil testing, drone support, and smart irrigation systems.
- Healthcare: Teleconsultations, Health ATMs, and emergency care.
- e-Governance: Assisted access to citizen services, documentation, and grievance redressal.
- E-Commerce: Integration with ONDC and digital marketplaces for local entrepreneurship.
- Financial Inclusion: Digital banking and payments
- Connectivity Backbone: Strengthened BharatNet FTTH with a Village Area Network and public Wi-Fi hotspots.
Current Affairs
July 11, 2026
About Financial Intelligence Unit–India:
- It was set by the Government of India in 2004.
- It is the central national agency responsible for receiving, processing, analyzing and disseminating information relating to suspect financial transactions.
- FIU-IND is an independent body reporting directly to the Economic Intelligence Council (EIC) headed by the Finance Minister.
- Function of Financial Intelligence Unit-India:
- Collection of Information: It acts as the central reception point for receiving Cash Transaction reports (CTRs), Non-Profit Organisation Transaction Report (NTRs), Cross Border Wire Transfer Reports (CBWTRs), Reports on Purchase or Sale of Immovable Property (IPRs) and Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs) from various reporting entities.
- Analysis of Information: Analyze received information in order to uncover patterns of transactions suggesting suspicion of money laundering and related crimes.
- Sharing of Information: It shares information with national intelligence/law enforcement agencies, national regulatory authorities and foreign Financial Intelligence Units.
- Central Repository: It establishes and maintains a national database on the basis of reports received from reporting entities.
- Coordination: It coordinates and strengthens collection and sharing of financial intelligence through an effective national, regional and global network to combat money laundering and related crimes.
- Research and Analysis: Monitor and identify strategic key areas on money laundering trends, typologies and developme
Current Affairs
July 11, 2026
About Helium:
- It is an inert gas and does not react with other substances or combust.
- It was discovered in 1868 by Jules Janssen and Norman Lockyer via a yellow spectral line during a solar eclipse.
- Formation: It is a non-renewable resource generated deep in the earth’s crust, where the radioactive decay of uranium and thorium atoms emits alpha particles, which capture electrons to form helium atoms.
- Properties of Helium
- Its atomic number is 2, making it the second lightest element after hydrogen, and it is not manufactured.
- Helium also has a very low boiling point (-268.9° C), allowing it to remain a gas even in super-cold environments.
- It does not participate easily in chemical reactions.
- The gas is non-toxic, but cannot be breathed on its own, because it displaces the oxygen humans need for respiration.
- It is the only element that cannot be solidified by sufficient cooling at normal atmospheric pressure.
- Largest global reserves: United States, Algeria, and Russia.
- India’s Rajmahal Volcanic Basin (Jharkhand) is a significant helium reservoir trapped for billions of years.
- Applications of Helium:
- Used as Coolant: It is used as coolant to cool the magnets in MRI machines, the silicon wafers in the semiconductor fabricating industry, and, increasingly, some of the devices used in quantum computers.
- Leak Detector: Engineers use helium as a leak-detector.
- Optical Fibre Manufacture: It is also used in the process of drawing optical fibres to rapidly and uniformly cool molten glass and to displace oxygen or nitrogen from forming bubbles inside the material.
- Aerospace: Spaceflight organisations like ISRO, NASA, and SpaceX use helium to pressurise fuel tanks in rockets.
- Research and the tourism sector in many parts of the world also use helium to inflate balloons and airships.
Current Affairs
July 11, 2026
About Flue Cured Virginia (FCV) Tobacco:
- Flue-cured Virginia tobacco, which is also known as Virginia Tobacco or Bright Leaf, is a bright, golden-leaf tobacco variety cured using controlled heat from flues — a process that preserves natural sugars and produces a mild, clean-burning leaf.
- It is one of the most widely traded tobacco types in international commerce.
- What is Curing?
- Curing is a process by which the harvested tobacco leaf is made ready for the market.
- To create smoking tobacco, the tobacco leaves need to be cured, or dried out.
- The wet, green tobacco leaves of a tobacco plant initially contain too much moisture to catch fire.
- They also have higher chlorophyll content. By releasing a certain amount of chlorophyll from the leaves during the drying out process, the natural tannins come out giving the smoked tobacco its flavor and scent.
- Curing is a well standardized process to achieve the desirable qualities in the cured leaf along with the removal of moisture.
- There are three types of tobacco curing methods traditionally used: Air-Cured, Fire-Cured, and Flue-Cured.
- Each of the different curing methods results in a tobacco product that is distinguishable by both its nicotine content and its aroma.
- Key characteristics of Flue Cured Tobacco:
- Produces primarily cigarette tobacco
- Contains a high sugar content
- Contains medium to high levels of nicotine
- Rich in natural tannins which creates its distinct mild and slightly sweet flavor and aroma.
- In India Flue Cured Virginia (FCV) Tobacco is mainly produced in India in 2 states, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka.
Current Affairs
July 11, 2026
About Sharavathi Lion-Tailed Macaque Sanctuary:
- It is located in Shimoga District in Karnataka.
- It lies in the Western Ghats.
- It was formed by combining the existing Sharavathi Valley Wildlife Sanctuary, Aghanashini Lion-Tailed Macaque Conservation Reserve, and the adjoining reserve forest blocks.
- The sanctuary shares its southwestern boundary with the Mookambika Wildlife Sanctuary.
- The sanctuary is nourished by the Sharavathi River. The Linganamakki reservoir spread over an area of 128.7 kms, is a part of this sanctuary.
- Terrain: The overall terrain of the sanctuary is highly undulating, with altitude ranging from 94 m to 1102 m.
- The spectacular Jog Falls, where water from the Sharavathi River falls from a height of almost 300 m, is present on the northern boundary of the sanctuary.
- Vegetation: It mainly consists of tropical evergreen to semi-evergreen types of forests, moist deciduous forests, and grasslands and savanna.
- Flora: The sanctuary is immensely rich in species like Dhoopa, Gulmavu, Surahonne, Mavu, Nandi, etc.
- Fauna:
- It is home to the endangered lion-tailed macaque (Macaca silenus), tiger, leopard, wild dog, jackal, sloth bear, spotted deer, sambar, barking deer, mouse deer, etc.
- It is home to approximately 700 lion-tailed macaques — the highest population of the endangered species in any protected area.