SAHITHI PANGALI

                                  SAHITHI PINGALI

                                                (Student scientist)


Sahithi Pingali just wanted to research about water pollutants destroying the natural water bodies of Bengaluru. This led her to conduct a research and present her paper at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF), world’s largest pre-college science exhibition. Post this, her life changed. She couldn’t believe that, what started as a research project, would add her to the list of elites with planets named after them.

Pingali’s paper, which was titled ‘An Innovative Crowdsourcing Approach to Monitoring Freshwater Bodies’ was selected as the best paper among 2000 other papers under the category of sustainability solutions. The said paper described her efforts focused on developing a data crowdsourcing system for her research. A class 12 student of Inventure Academy, Pingali, developed a smartphone app along with a basic lake monitoring kit which aims at helping and educating residents of Bengaluru to gain information related to city’s water pollution. However, being in the top 3% of the ISEF finalists was not the only prize that Pingali won. She now has the honour of having a planet named after her, a privilege owed by only a handful of people across the globe. The Lincoln Lab at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) recognised Sahithi Pingali’s work, and named a minor planet in the Milky Way after her.
Sahithi Pingali is the founder of WaterInsights, an innovative crowdsourcing platform which generates water monitoring data at a scale and frequency never seen before and gathers it in a web-based Water Health Map of the World. By making data centralized, accessible, and interactive, WaterInsights aims to improve pollution remediation across the globe. Sahithi has worked in environmental research and activism, specifically around water pollution, since the age of 15.

She has collaborated with interdisciplinary stakeholders ranging from scientists to social workers, businessmen, and politicians. Having grown up in Bangalore, India surrounded by water crisis,
she is incredibly passionate about this issue. She has won several international awards for her work, including a Minor Planet named after her (for winning a Grand Award at Intel ISEF in Los Angeles, USA); a Gold Medal at the International Sustainable World Environment-Engineering-Energy Project (ISWEEEP) Olympiad in Houston, USA; the USAID Global Development Innovation Award; the Arizona State University Walton Sustainability Solutions Award; and Saudi Arabia’s King Abdul Aziz Award for Outstanding Performance in Water Technology. She was also featured as a lead cast member in the environmental documentary film “Inventing Tomorrow.” Sahithi is currently a sophomore at Stanford University.

LIFE STORY OF SAHITHI





 Sahithi Pingali's faithful companions ncluded a small blue-green plastic tumbler and some jute rope.

Armed with these two things, Sahithi would show up besides Bengaluru's ignominious water bodies, like the foaming Varthur and BellandurLake once every week.
The teenager would then carefully make her way into the water, some of which has been known to 'catch fire', and swing the tumbler in to scoop some out.
After scrupulously noting down the GPS coordinates of her location, Sahithi would make her way home.
While most try to stay clear of these toxic lakes for fear of sickness or plain repugnance, here was a 16 year old who'd almost never miss her scheduled visits to these exemplars of neglect.
Once back home, Sahithi would carefully funnel the water into a bottle for developing 'testing' mechanisms.
This was no child's play. Over the last one year, Sahithi has developed a low-cost, easy-to-use mobile app that works with electronic sensors and chemical test strips.
The app allows users to check contamination, and all of the data can be stored online to build a data bank.
It is for this feat that Sahithi will now have a minor planet in the Milky Way named after her.
In June, at The International Sustainable World Engineering Energy Environment Project Olympiad held in Houston, Texas, Sahithi won the gold for her innovative research on how to monitor freshwater bodies.
She then took the project to the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (Intel ISEF), the world's largest pre-college science competition, which has a tie-up with the MIT Lincoln Laboratory.
This research facility has discovered about 250,000 near-Earth objects since its operations in 1998. The naming rights for 137,000 of these discoveries lie with the lab that has partnered with the Society for Science & the Public to honour young scientists.
At this event, Sahithi went on to win special awards from the Arizona State University, one from Saudi Arabia's king and his Companions Foundation for Giftedness and Creativity, and another from the US Agency for International Development.
A few hours later, Sahithi made her way to the stage once again.
This time around, it was announced that this teen would have a planet as her namesake.
Sitting in the audience during these announcements were her parents, Gopal and Aruna, and her younger siblings, Lalitha (12) and Sreekari (9).
As a distinguished scientist and vice-president at IBM, one wouldn't think Sahithi's father Gopal would face a paucity of words, but he has seemingly run out of adjectives.
"This is so exciting. It's amazing. It's so inspiring..." he trails off, laughing.
When Sahithi was initially selected to represent the country at the international fair, Gopal remembers being thrilled.
"I couldn't think of anyone in our family who had ever represented the country in an international event. That itself was overwhelming," he says. "Now, she's won on behalf of India and put our family's name in the sky."
Sahithi's achievement has also opened the portal to a galaxy of space quips: "She's shown that the sky is not the limit," says Gopal, adding to the growing collection.
While these announcements were being made in Houston, at Sahithi's school back in Bengaluru, about 700 students were sitting around on mattresses. They had gathered for their annual sleepover, and the news of Sahithi's achievement was met with loud cheers across Inventure Academy's campus.
Sahithi has studied here for eight years, ever since her family moved to the city from New York.
"Now, we can look for Sahithi in the sky," became the most common one-liner that night.
Sahithi wanted to be a writer when she was younger, but by the time she reached middle school, her interest in science, math and environmental studies was unmatched.
"I grew up in the US where a lot of consciousness is building around environmental issues," says Sahithi.
The move to Bengaluru only heightened Sahithi's interests, especially when she became a part of her school's change-making initiative, 'Our Lakes, Our Voice'.
"I lived in an apartment overlooking the Kaikondrahalli lake, and I didn't even know it was a lake until I saw workmen pour water into it," recalls Sahithi. Kaikondrahalli lake is one of the few rejuvenated lakes in Bengaluru.
The contrast between how our water bodies are and how they should be has been very glaring for her.
"I think this is because she's old enough to notice it, and young enough to be sensitive about it," says Gopal.
An avid reader, Sahithi's long-term problem has centered around picking between favourites. So rather than pick a favourite, she prefers to talk about her current read, Frugal Innovation: How to Do Better With Less (Jaideep Prabhu and Navi Radjou).
Presently an intern at the civil and environmental engineering department of Michigan, Sahithi celebrates discipline.
"She always makes schedules for the coming days and weeks, and always sticks to them. Her younger sisters may stay up late, but Sahithi makes it a point to go off to bed by 9 pm, even during exams," says her father.
"Sahithi is tremendously focussed and dedicated. She's got a lot of grit and has always been more for actions than words," notes Nooraine Fazal, co-founder and managing trustee, Inventure Academy.
Sahithi, says Fazal, realised that people will only want to fix a problem after they acknowledge it.
This is where her mobile, water-testing app comes in handy by colour-coding results. (Blue means the water is fit for drinking with disinfection, purple signifies it's fine to bathe in. Yellow is good for fish, and so on.)
Seeing their daughter pouring over academic books has been a common sight for as long as her parents can remember.
By grade eight, Sahithi had progressed to spending hours reading college-level material, and then writing international senior-level exams.
The first time around, she was plain curious. Soon, the novelty of taking exams beyond her grade took another form.
'I find freedom in self-study,' Sahithi told her parents back then.
Even here, she found it difficult to choose subjects: She was following Physics papers as much as Biology ones, and taking on calculus when she was in the ninth grade.
'Imagine how the world would be/ Without any technology,' Sahithi writes in a poem posted on her blog. 'Imagine that there were no screw/If you had to hold things together/There would be nothing to do. Your desks would break, And the doors would fall flat/Imagine all the problems caused because of that.'
She wrote this when she was 10.
It'd be easy for anyone to label Sahithi as a nerd, but her interests are varied.
She was playing the piano till Class X, then found a "deeper connection" with the veena.
She also practises Bharata Natyam. "You can see that she dances with joy," says Aruna, Sahithi's mother, also a classical dance teacher.
As a Harry Potter fan, she agrees that it'd be lovely to have magical beasts who could clean up our lakes. But even before she decides on which of the beasts from Potterverse could be a suitable candidate, the scientist in her takes over.
"I think using magic will come with its own price, so before making a decision on the kind of beast to use, I would need to know how to control them," says Sahithi who wants her work to always be motivated by social needs.
"Sahithi's generation is much more environment conscious. They are the ones opening our eyes," says Gopal. "It's a good thing that children like Sahithi are going beyond smiley emoticons and are actually finding a connect with the real world," says Fazal.
Children should have a say in their future, she adds, and this is how Sahithi is doing it.
After her internship, Sahithi will return to the city by August. Among those who await her include her veena, Bengaluru's lakes, and a host of well-wishers armed with space puns.

Saarang Sumesh

                                    Saarang Sumesh

                                                (ROBOT MAKER)


Meet India's youngest robot maker who created his first robot at the age of 4


Saarang Sumesh, a child prodigy who hails from Kochi is the youngest robot maker in India.

 “At the age of three he developed inclination for electronic goods. He used to dismantle electronic devices at a young age and refit them quickly. We noticed his prowess when he was four,” said the mother Sreejaya, a former school teacher, adding he got his first lesson from his father VS Sumesh, an electronics engineer, currently working in the US.

Sarang and his mother returned to Kochi from the US when the boy was three years old to live with his old paternal grandparents.

Interesting facts about Saarang:

  • He made his first robot at the age of 4 and his inventions are inspired by daily problems
  • Inspired by the youngest robot maker, his school has developed a special innovation lab

List of robots created by Saarang Sumesh:

  • A walking stick for the visually challenged
  • Robotic hand
  • Tricycle
  • Lego calculator
  • Digital clock
  • Hand speed game
  • A humanoid robot that can fire bullets
  • LEGO NxT robot models
  • Arduino projects using Raspberry Pi
  • Cleaning Robot
  • Smart Seat Belt

Saarang story to become a robot maker

Tired of seeing his mother struggle with a broom and mop every day in their house in Kochi, a little boy pestered his parents to get him some tools and instruments and made a robot to clean the floor.


Saarang innovations

Smart seat belt

His latest innovation is a smart car seat belt that automatically detaches in case of fire and accident which he developed in 2017. The innovation was sparked by a tragedy in Thrissur when a car in which a family was travelling suddenly caught fire. The head of the family who was at the wheels helped everyone escape but could not extricate himself from the burning car as his seat belt got jammed. Sarang got to work after the tragedy to come up with the smart seat belt.
“The smart seat belt can sense when the accident is happening and act accordingly. Collision will be detected by accelerometer. It can also sense fire or water and release the belt quickly,” he said. In case of a collision, the belt will not release immediately but will depend on the vibration of the vehicle ensuring safety of passengers.

List of achievements of the youngest robot maker marked upon his name:

In the science exhibition, TECH FOSS 2K16, held in Kochi, his booth was one of the most jam-packed ones, with people gathering to see the three robots he had kept on display 
At such an young age he has grace huge stages with his presence various tech fests, Maker Week End at Cusat, Techfoss at TocH, MakerFest at Ahmadabad (makerfest.com), LEGO league at Coimbatore 
Saarang has been the youngest attendee in the world to be present and exhibit his creations at the largest Maker Faire at Silicon Valley, USA (makerfaire.com) in the year 2016,

He was He was the youngest speaker in TEDX in the year 2016
Sarang is running against time delivering lectures and giving demonstrations in the country and abroad. He has just returned from Ahmedabad science fest and is getting ready for his second Maker Faire appearance in San Francisco. Rated as the youngster Tedex (thinkers, doers and idea generators’ conclave) speaker of the country he also spoke at Fab 12 Conference in Shenzhen in China last year.

Awards:

His inventions and innovations have got him a clutch of recognitions and honours. Last year Kerala chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan had honoured him with Young Achiever (Yuva Prathibha) award.

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AKASH MANOJ

              AKASH MANOJ

              (Indian inventor)

Akash Manoj (born 21 December 2001) is an indian cardiology researcher inventor from  Tamilnadu .

"He is known for his award-winning research on "silent" heart attacks"

Main reason to invent

Akash lost his grandfather due to a silent heart attack when he was thirteen. Silent heart attacks strike at-risk patients who are affected by nerve damage. Unlike most teenagers, inspired by the intricacies of the problem, Manoj translated his emotions into social motivation and, eventually, into action.
At the end of three years of research and experiments funded by the Government of India at various labs across India, including SRISTI-BIRAC, he developed a novel technique that can non-invasively detect and alert at-risk patients of a potential asymptomatic heart-attack. His method involves transcutaneously isolating, identifying, spectroscopically analyzing, and sensing elevation in the levels of a cardiac biomarker called heart-type fatty acid binding protein (h-FABP) in realtime – a process that significantly establishes a path to preventative cardiovascular healthcare. 

How does the device work?

A small silicon patch is stuck on the back of the ear or wrist which monitors if there has been a silent heart attack instead of going through tests like echo cardiograms.

Akash was invited to Tokyo University of Science, Japan for presenting his project at the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences. His project got endorsed and clinically approved by their experts.


Personal life:

His parents, businessman Manoj Prabhakar and housewife Somi, while also studying advanced cardiology and other fields of medicine. He is an avid speaker, reader and tennis player and also enjoys exploring the field of aeronautics.

Awards:

National Child Award for exceptional achievement” – Gold medal conferred upon by President of India, Ram Nath Kovind in November 2017.
  • Received honours for the “best innovation” from former President Pranab Mukherjee in March 2017.

    Conferred with IRIS Grand Award by Intel India in association with Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of India and Indo-US science and Technology Forum (IUSSTF) in November 2017.
    Chosen to represent the Indian Republic at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) in May 2018 at Pittsburgh, United States. “Business Model Award” by Society of Open Innovation, Technology, Market and Compexity (SoITMC), South Korea and Daegu University, South Korea.


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Angad Daryani

             Angad Daryani                             (FOUNDER&TEDxSpeaker)

A genius Mumbaikar, Angad Daryani is a social tech entrepreneur and maker of unique low-cost DIY (Do-it-Yourself) Kits. An ardentart lover, he paints his canvas with electrons

Angad Daryani, an 18 year old Mumbaiker.”Maker” is what he calls himself. Angad is a school dropout, who left school in the 9th grade and spent 6 hours a day with his tutor learning things that interested himAngad is a TEDx speaker, founder of Sharkits and SharkBot 3D systemsAngad is the maker of India’s first 3D printer which is also the world’s cheapest 3D printer. He has been an inventor since a very tender age. At 8 he developed Lego Mindstorm Humanoid Robot, at 9 he created Breathing System, Pinhole Camera, Plastic Kaleidoscope and several other significant things. At such an early age, Angad aims at improving people’s lives through technology and innovation.


Inspiring 15 year old Angad Daryani Builds Eye-pad – Virtual Brailer For the Blind


Angad Daryani has been called a number of things: child prodigy, little genius, the inspiring teenager, but he can best be described by one word—Maker. He quit school in 9th grade to teach himself the art of science and was home schooled by teachers who focus on hands on learning.
Angad has always been passionate about building things, from improvising already existing software to making custom hardware. This one-man-army built at the age of 13 Rep Raps  and supplies to prestigious institutions like the Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai, where he is also currently doing research on Desktop Prototyping with Tree Labs.
His passion for building things led to the invention of Virtual Brailler, a device that converts digital text from Roman to braille in real time to give tactile braille feedback to the tracked finger of a visually challenged person. This low cost ebook reader for the blind is a revolutionary product that could make books accessible to millions of people who currently depend on time-consuming methods like getting braille books printed or unintuitive methods like text-to-speech.
This project was developed in collaboration with other engineers and designers at the DIY Workshop, Hyderabad, and the team plans to take it forward, so that they could help blind people know the joy of paperless reading through open source.
15 year-old Angad’s love for aquatic animals led him to name his DIY Kits company, Shark Kits, whose open source kits are available for Indian enthusiasts at reasonable prices.

 has been called a number of things: child prodigy, little genius, the inspiring teenager, but he can best be described by one word—Maker. Homeschooled by teachers who focus on hands on learning, Angad has always been passionate about building things, from improvising already existing software to making custom hardware.
                                                          
When a guy builds a Rep Rap 3D printer at the age of 13, you know there is no stopping him. Angad’s love for aquatic animals led him to name his DIY Kits company, Shark Kits, whose open source kits are available for Indian enthusiasts at reasonable prices. He has created PRAAN, a device to scrub out pollution from air and render it clean. Currently studying at Georgia Tech, Atlanta he will surely launch his business soon.
Well, he might be a school drop-out but he still is pursuing education through home-schooling. Now … here’s the catch … he has appeared for board exams for not one, not two but three boards! He has cleared board exams of ICSE, IGCSE and NIOS. Really? Weren’t we or for that matter students of today cramming to clear board exams just for once, and this child here has cleared three boards. 
His passion for building things led to the invention of Virtual Brailler, a device that converts digital text from Roman to braille in real time to give tactile braille feedback to the tracked finger of a visually challenged person. This low cost ebook reader for the blind is a revolutionary product that could make books accessible to millions of people who currently depend on time-consuming methods like getting braille books printed or unintuitive methods like text-to-speech. This project was developed in collaboration with other engineers and designers at the DIy Workshop, Hyderabad, and the team plans to take it forward, so that they could help blind people know the joy of paperless reading through open source.

AKRIT JASWALA

                                  AKRIT JASWALA

                                                (Young surgeon)

Akrit Jaswal World's Youngest Surgical Doctor
Akrit Jaswal was born in India on April 23, 1993. Akrit Jaswal was born as an indigo child, so it is not surprising that he has intelligence above average. IQ Akrit Jaswal at the age of 13 is said to be 146 who have been at the level of super genius.


Akrit’s Jaswal First Surgery

In a nearby village, a toddler burned her hand and the burns were so severe that her fingers curled up and the skin on her fingers melted together. Due to her family’s poverty, she was never operated on and for years, the little girl’s hand was of no use.
By now, Akrit Jaswal had already earned a reputation in his village for being the medical genius and at the age of eight, her family sought out Akrit Jaswal to operate on their daughter. So they traveled over to Jaswal’s village for help.

After signing a waiver, Jaswal agreed to do the surgery free of charge. In the following weeks, his parents ordered surgical knives, camera equipment, and anesthesia for the occasion. On November 19, 2000, Jaswal performed his first surgery and separated the girl’s fingers for the first time after an hour-long operation.
When he was seven, hospitals in Nurpur would let him observe various surgeries. These privileges are usually granted to graduate students. However, the doctors at the local hospitals were excited to see a young boy passionate about studying medicine. Word spread quickly through the region about the child prodigy. People of all ages from toddlers to the elderly sought Jaswal’s advice, diagnosis and treatment on their ailments.

Akrit Jaswal’s Education

Although there is not much clarity on Jaswal’s early schooling but since his successful surgery, Oprah Winfrey and a number of medical societies have interviewed Akrit Jaswal after which he also became the youngest medical student in an Indian University.
He was twelve-year s-old
While he was in school, Indian officials tested his IQ.  They found out that Jaswal’s 146 IQ ranked higher than any other twelve-year old boy in India. Three years later, he graduated with a science degree from Chandigarh College.
Then, at seventeen, Jaswal began his master’s degree in Chemistry. Currently, he is studying Bioengineering at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur. Now, Jaswal is twenty-three years old and his passion and focus have not moved an inch. Through the years, he has become even more focused on his goals. He continues to work hard in school and continues his research to find a cure for cancer.

Akrit Jaswal’s Parent’s Support

When Jaswal was five-years old and expressed interest in studying medicine, his parents did everything they could to provide their son with the resources he needed to learn more about medicine. Growing up, Jaswal’s father brought his son many biology books. The books covered a variety of topics from anesthesia and surgical procedures to anatomy and physiology. Akrit Jaswal studied each book intently and his father described his son’s studying ability as “a photographic memory”.
Jaswal has a big heart and is truly a genius!
It is latest photograph of akrit kastalu

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SAHITHI PANGALI

                                  SAHITHI PINGALI                                                 (Student scientist) ABOUT SEE...