City
Epaper

Indian-origin kid wins top prize in US science contest for middle schoolers

By IANS | Updated: October 30, 2021 09:25 IST

New York, Oct 30 Indian-origin Akilan Sankaran has won the top prize in the nation's leading science competition ...

Open in App

New York, Oct 30 Indian-origin Akilan Sankaran has won the top prize in the nation's leading science competition with a computer programme using "antiprime numbers" that can accelerate everyday processes.

While the 14-year-old won the $25,000 prize in the Broadcom Masters science and engineering competition on Thursday, three of the four winners of the next level prizes of $10,000 were also of Indian-origin, as were 15 of the 30 finalists from around the country.

Maya Ajmera, the president of the Society for Science (SfS), which runs the competition with Broadcom Foundation, said: "The young people we are celebrating today are working to solve the world's most intractable problems. The Broadcom Masters finalists serve as an inspiration to us all, and I know they will all go on to find immense success on their STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) journey."

Akilan's winning entry was the computer program that can calculate "highly divisible numbers" that are called antiprime numbers and are over 1,000 digits long, SfS said.

"He created a new class of functions – the smooth class – to measure a number's divisibility" and his programme has the potential capacity to speed up and optimize the performance of software and apps," it said.

"

Sankaran "hopes to become an astrophysicist so that he can merge three of his favourite topics: physics, mathematics and space science", according to the SfS.

Camellia Sharma, 14, built a 3D-printed aerial drone/boat that can fly to a spot, land on the water and take underwater photos while its software can then count the fish living there, winning a $10,000 award.

Another winner of a similar award, Prisha Shroff, 14, developed an artificial intelligence-based wildfire prevention system that uses satellite and meteorological data to identify fire-prone locations and deploy drones there.

For her study of the many social factors that affect the health of communities, Ryka C. Chopra, 13, geocoded the locations of fast-food restaurants to see if they are built near populations of obese people, perhaps contributing to the obesity cycle, winning another $10,000 award.

More than 1,800 middle school students from across the US entered the Broadcom Masters competition.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: The Premonition: A Pandemic StoryCamellia sharmaBroadcom
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalEU approves Broadcom’s $61 bn VMware acquisition

InternationalEU approves Broadcom’s $61 bn VMware acquisition

TechnologyApple signs multibillion-dollar deal with Broadcom to develop 5G components

InternationalIndian-origin teen wins $250K US science prize

TechnologyBroadcom to acquire enterprise cloud services provider VMware for $61 bn

International Realted Stories

InternationalEAM Jaishankar, young political leaders from Nepal discuss bilateral cooperation

InternationalSouth Korea: Special counsel to question ex-Defence Minister next week in martial law probe

InternationalIndia, Russia sign protocol to deepen industrial and technological cooperation

InternationalNepal law minister denies any move to legalise polygamy amid criticism over draft proposal

InternationalEAM Jaishankar meets young Nepalese leaders; highlights strong India-Nepal ties