November 3, 2021
2 mins read

Indian origin teenager wins top US science competition

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…reports Asian Lite News.

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.

“By analysing and developing ‘smooth highly divisible numbers’, Akilan’s goal was to make calculations run more quickly, in turn accelerating countless everyday processes and tasks,” it added.

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.

ALSO READ-Leeds Mayor Honours Indian-origin dancer

READ MORE-Indian origin docs to brief US lawmakers on healthcare issues

Previous Story

Changes needed to protect India’s demographic dividend

Next Story

DIWALI SPECIAL: TANISHQ UNVEILS UTSAAH

Latest from -Top News

Amnesty Hits Out at Pakistan’s Minority Abuse

Amnesty’s “Cut Us Open and See That We Bleed Like Them” report says many sanitation workers—mostly Christians and Hindus—are stuck in low-paid, dangerous jobs due to bias and neglect…reports Asian Lite News

Third-Hottest July Still Dangerous

Eleven countries, including China, Japan, North Korea, Tajikistan, Bhutan, Brunei and Malaysia, saw their hottest July in at least 50 years. The world just experienced its third-hottest July on record, ending a

Unprecedented Indo-Japan military tech partnership

India and Japan are breaking new ground in defence cooperation by forging an “unprecedented high-technology military collaboration,” a detailed report by the Tokyo-based Japan Forward Association said this week. “The Indo-Pacific region
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Vietnam-based hackers target India, US, UK

DarkGate is a Remote Access Trojan (RAT) that first emerged

US Puts Afghanistan Back On Front Burner

The US action against the IS-K leadership comes at a