Scientific scrutiny ends speculation in the Sabarimala gold controversy. ISRO analysis affirms: sanctum door panels are authentic copper sheets, stripped of gold plating through chemical wizardry, not replaced. Delivered to SIT and Kerala High Court, the verdict crushes fears of dismantled holy relics or overseas smuggling rings.
Material breakdowns from the space center highlight the plating’s thinness—far from solid gold fantasies. The kattil wooden core passed muster unscathed. Remounted sheets bear telltale gold voids, extracted sans base erosion.
Surface quirks arousing suspicion stem from stripping reagents—mercury cocktails reshaping metal faces. Categorical denial of substitutions bolsters temple security narratives. Ongoing SIT cross-checks with legacy artifacts precede the master report.
This data pivot compels a recalibration: from conspiracy hunts to forensic pursuit of chemists and insiders. For millions of Sabarimala pilgrims, it’s reassurance amid outrage, underscoring science’s role in safeguarding sacred legacies against cunning theft.

