Planets Named After Students

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    • Publish Date: Sep 7 2016 1:35PM
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    • Updated Date: Sep 8 2016 2:24PM
Planets Named After Students

An asteroid in Jupiter's orbit had been named after the band's late frontman Freddie Mercury on what would have been his 70th birthday. We bring you some students, who have a planet named after them. 


Hamsa Padmanabhan
At 16, Hamsa Padmanabhan had a minor planet 21575 named 'Hamsa', after her. She was then a second-year B.Sc student of Fergusson College, when she made a presentation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's (MIT) Lincoln lab for the Intel International Science and Engineering Fir (ISEF) in 2006. Today at 21, she is doing her post graduation in Physics from Pune University, after which she plans to do her doctoral research in theoretical physics.


Vishnu Jayaprakash
In 2010, Vishnu Jayaprakash, then a Chennai class XII student of Chettinad Vidyashram demonstrated a microbial fuel cell that runs on cow dung and inexpensive graphite electrodes. The minor planet named after him is called 25620 Jayaprakash. He aimed to reduce power costs for India’s 700,000 villages. Today, he has done extensive research on renewable energy technologies, and is now focussing on Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC) technology. 


Anish Mukherjee
When Anish Mukherjee and Debarghya Sarkar were only 16 years old, they noticed the large scale bottle tampering rampant in India. They took the idea of autodisposable syringes—which, once used, cannot be used again—and implemented that for one-time use bottle cap. Their design enabled customers to know if the the bottle had been tampered with. For this, planet 2000 AH52 he was renamed 25629 Mukherjee.


Debarghya Sarkar 
In 2010, Sarkar and his school classmate Anish Mukherjee worked on an innovative design that would make bottle-caps completely tamper proof. For his contribution to electrical and mechanical engineering, 25630 Sarkar (previously 2000 AT53) is named after him. Debarghya Sarkar is currently a Ph.D. student at the University of Southern California. He plans to take his interest in bottle cap design towards a larger goal - design, fabrication and integration of devices that modulate photons and electrons.


Hetal Vaishnav
When class X student Hetal Vaishnav saw that ragpickers were not picking up waste packets made up of multilayer plastic, she found that recycling companies avoided buying multilayer film plastic waste from them as it cannot be reused or recycled. Hetal then spent months to innovate upon a process to deliver an innovative material that is “sustainable to water, has good nail- and screw-holding capacity, and has features that are better than MDF (Medium-density fibreboard) and plywood.”. This let her use multilayered and metallised plastic used for packaging wafers and chewing tobacco. "I got a certificate from Lincoln Lab a few days ago," Hetal said on telephone from Rajkot. Planet 25636 Vaishnav was named for her contribution to the environment.
 

Would you prefer any planet to be named after you?

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Comments

Ritvik Baweja Bal Bharati Public School

Getting honored by getting a celestial object as your name is a very great thing,but achieving this feat requires lot of determination and hard work in the field of Astronomy. After all who doesn''t want an unknown object to be recognized as his/her name

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