Rifath Shaarook
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About Rifath Shaarook
Name at birth: Mohamed Hussain
In 2017: Lead Scientist at Space Kidz India
Past: Chutti Vikatan
In 2017: Was studying BSc Physics at The New College
Past: Crescent Matriculation Higher Secondary School, Pallapatti
Lives in Pallapatti, Tamil Nadu
Born 2 April [1999, presumably]
The Hindu on Rifath, the person
C. Jaisankar| Karur student’s satellite model to soar high | MAY 12, 2017 | The Hindu
It is the only model selected from India to be launched by SR 4 rocket
For eighteen-year-old Md. Rifath Shaarook, who is awaiting his Plus Two results, a small room in his house situated in a narrow lane of Pallapatti in Karur district, is his space research station. He is not perturbed about his Plus Two results, which will be out on Friday. But his actions and thoughts centre around the “Femto” experimental satellite designed by him with a group of five other students.
The satellite that weighs just 64 grams was among 80 models selected among 86,000 designs submitted by young contestants belonging to 57 countries in the “Cubes in Space” contest organised by Idoodle Learning in association with NASA. The satellite is the only model selected from India to be launched into the sub-orbital space by SR 4 rocket.
The satellite is made of reinforced carbon fibre with 3-D printing technology. It took more than two-years for Shaarook and his team to design the less weight satellite using the 3-D printing technology at a cost of just ₹1 lakh.
“I am eagerly awaiting the launch of our satellite. It will be a big day for not only me but also for the aspiring space scientists,” says a beaming Shaarook, who lost his father Mohamed Farook when he was studying in Class-V at a government primary school in Pallapatti.
The satellite with sensors would carry out its mission from the moment of its launch.
It would be in sub-orbital spaceflight for 12 minutes and would then land back in the ocean.
It would capture and record temperature, atmosphere, radiation level, rotation buckling and magnetosphere, said Shaarook, who is a “lead scientist” in Chennai-based Space Kidz India, which is encouraging aspiring space students.
Vinay Bharadwaj, Tanishq Dwevdi, Yagnasai, Abdul Kashif and Gobi Nath were part of the team that designed the satellite.
Srimathy Kesan, Chief Executive Officer, Space Kidz India, Chennai, said that hard work, commitment and innovation of the team led by Rifath Shaarook had given a splendid recognition to young aspiring scientists. It would motivate other students too.
Ever since Shaarook revealed the selection of his satellite for the launch, his house in Pallapatti continues to get steady visitors. Moreover, Crescent Matriculation Higher Secondary School in Pallapatti, where he is now studying has also got congratulatory messages.
“Shaarook lost his father at a young age. However, the zeal that he inherited from his father has made him a young scientist,” says Shakila Banu, mother of Shaarook.
KalamSat
KalamSat, developed by Tamil Nadu's Rifath Sharook, was launched by Nasa rocket on June 21 2017 from a Nasa facility in Wallops Island
When the US’ National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) launched the world’s smallest satellite KalamSat on June 21, it was the first time ever that it would be piloting an experiment by an Indian student. Developed by Rifath Sharook, an 18-year-old boy, from Tamil Nadu’s Pallapatti town, KalamSat weighs only 64 grammes.
‘KalamSat’, named after India's nuclear scientist and former President, APJ Abdul Kalam, will be launched from a Nasa facility in Wallops Island. Sharook’s project, the first to be manufactured via 3D printing, got selected through a competition, ‘Cubes in Space', sponsored jointly by NASA and 'I Doodle Learning'. The project aims to take the performance of new technology to space.
Key features of the miniature satellite
Sharook said it would be a sub-orbital flight and after launch the mission span would be 240 minutes. The tiny satellite would operate for 12 minutes in a micro-gravity environment of space. “The main role of the satellite will be to demonstrate the performance of 3D-printed carbon fibre”, the Times of India quoted Sharook as saying.
Speaking about his experience, Sharook added: “We designed it completely from scratch. It will have a new kind of on-board computer and eight indigenous built-in sensors to measure acceleration, rotation and the magnetosphere of the earth. The main challenge was to design an experiment to be flown to space which would fit into a four-metre cube weighing 64 grammes”.
His experiment was funded by an organisation called ‘Space Kidz India’, said Sharook, adding he had a great interest in space and he was also a subscriber of the Nasa Kid’s Club.
After the launch
HIGHLIGHTS
The satellite is called Kalamsat and weighs a mere 64 grams.
The satellite was designed by 18-year-old Tamil Nadu student Rifath Sharook and his team.
Kalamsat was the only Indian payload in the Nasa mission.
MUMBAI: On Thursday, India once again broke a global space record by launching the world's lightest satellite weighing a mere 64 grams, called Kalamsat, designed and developed not by professional space scientists and engineers, but by 18-year-old Tamil Nadu student Rifath Sharook and his team.
The tiny satellite, named after Abdul Kalam, was flown by a Nasa sounding rocket and the lift-off was from the space agency's Wallop Island facility around 3pm (IST). Kalam had his training in the sounding rocket programme at Wallops Island in the '60s. Kalamsat was the only Indian payload in the mission.
Speaking to TOI post Speaking to TOI post launch from Chennai, mission director Srimathy Kesan said that the total flight time of the rocket was 240 minutes and the satellite, assembled at her T.Nagar residence in Chennai, separated from the rocket 125 minutes after lift-off.
"Kalamsat fell into the sea. It will be recovered and Nasa will be sending it back to us for decoding the data, she said while pointing out in an emotion-choked voice that the flight was "out of the world and it was a divine intervention."
Explained Kesan: "I am calling it divine intervention because the previous Nasa mission from Wallops got postponed because of weather and we were able to launch successfully today." This one-of-itskind satellite, which can be held in one's palm is a 3.8cm cube and its structure is fully 3-D printed with reinforced carbon fiber polymer. It is equipped with a nano Geiger Muller counter which will measure radiation in space. Added Kesan: "It is the only cube to be converted into a satellite in this mission," she added.
National Geographic’s discussion
An Indian teenager has not only produced A 64-gram (0.14-pound) satellite, NASA has agreed to launch it. (Science Alert)
What is a satellite?
Rifath Shaarook, an 18-year-old Indian teenager, just designed Kalam Sat, the world’s lightest satellite. What is a satellite?
NASA says:
A satellite is any object that orbits around another object. (Learn about orbits here.) Satellites can be natural or artificial.
Natural satellites include objects such as the Moon, which orbits the Earth, and the Earth itself, which orbits the sun.
Artificial satellites include any of the thousands of objects launched into orbit from spaceports on Earth. Artificial satellites are used for everything from measuring and tracking weather, to coordinating our GPS, to helping archaeologists identify potential dig sites, to counting penguins, to zooming in on Earth and peering into outer space.
What does Kalam Sat do?
Kalam Sat will actually have a suborbital spaceflight, meaning it will reach space, but not complete an orbital revolution. It will be operated for about 12 minutes before crashing back to Earth.
According to Science Alert, “its main objective will be to test the durability of its extremely light, 3D-printed casing” in the microgravity of outer space.
The Kalam Sat’s casing is made of carbon fiber reinforced polymer, a very strong, light plastic.
The instruments of the Kalam Sat itself will be housed inside the casing. “It will have a new kind of onboard computer and eight … built-in sensors to measure acceleration, rotation, and the magnetosphere of Earth,” says Shaarook.
What makes the Kalam Sat’s casing so intriguing to NASA and the rest of the space community?
If it works, that casing will be efficient and affordable to both develop and launch. Shaarook and his team created the satellite and its casing for less than $1,561.
Propaganda: 'Our media ignored Rifath'
Propaganda to the effect that Rifath’s achievement was ignored by the media went viral on the internet and Whatsapp (see picture). Organisations like ‘The Youth’ and ‘Unknown Facts’ spread lies to politicise the achievement. Many Whatsapp comments gave a sectarian twist to the alleged media blackout of Rifath’s achievement.
Indpaedia decided to investigate.
Clearly all the media giants like The Times of India (45 days before the launch, and after), The Hindu (before the launch, and after), The Telegraph, Calcutta, Business Standard (five weeks before the launch) and Economic Times, and countless smaller Indian media outlets had duly covered Rifath’s work.
When Indpaedia confronted those giving a sectarian twist to the alleged media blackout of Rifath’s achievement on Whatsapp, they tried to wriggle out, saying that they meant that the TV channels had blacked out Rifath’s work.
Indpaedia decided to investigate again
MEA (Ministry of External Affairs) had telecast an item six weeks before NASA launched Rifath’s satellite. (1.44 minutes)
So had DD News
…and News 18 Tamilnadu (3.45 minutes).
News 18 did it again (4.12 minutes) around the same time.
News Today covered the feat five weeks before NASA’s launch (1.37 minutes).
Thanthi TV, a leading Tamil channel, did so six weeks before the launch, as well as after.
So did India Today (2.18 minutes)
…and NTDTV.
Zee News covered Rifath’s work, three times, before as well as after the launch.
ANI/ The Times of India did so after the launch.
… as did PTI News Corporation (1.27 minutes)
… while MEA (Ministry of External Affairs) covered it again after the launch.
Videsh TV did several capsules on how the world media covered Rifath’s feat. (This one is 7.34 minutes long.)
Several Tamil channels covered the achievement repeatedly, as did Behindwoods, One India Hindi, One India Tamil and several lesser known Indian TV channels.
It was NOT the media that was busy showing political fights but ‘The Youth’ and ‘Unknown Facts’ were unnecessarily politicising Rifath’s laudable work.
Laurels in the international media
Nigeria: Nigeria News Today
Indian teenager Rifath Shaarook has designed and built what is thought to be the world's lightest satellite - and it's due to be launched at a Nasa facility in June. The 64-gram device is made from 3D printed carbon fibre, and was the winning entry in ...
After this, the Nigeria News Today report gives hyperlinks to the following stories about Rifath’s achievement, published in the international press:
Teen Builds World's Smallest Satellite Using 3D Printing Facts Chronicle
NASA to launch teen-designed 'lightest satellite' The Space Reporter
Indian Teen Develops World's 'Smallest' Satellite- And NASA Is Launching It Techworm
Futurism -International Business Times -The TeCake -Merinews
all 25 news articles »
In order to access these 30+ articles about Rifath you can visit the website of Nigeria News Today, which has hyperlinks to all these articles.
U.K.: The Telegraph
Indian teenager Rifath Shaarook has designed and built what is thought to be the world's lightest satellite - and it's due to be launched at a Nasa facility in June.
The 64-gram device is made from 3D printed carbon fibre, and was the winning entry in Cubes in Space, a design contest for young inventors organised by education company idoodle, with backing from Nasa and the Colorado Space Grant Consortium.
Rifath has named his creation KalamSat, after former Indian president Abdul Kalam. It will be launched from Nasa's Wallops Island facility in the US next month, entering into a four-hour sub-orbital flight. For 12 minutes of the flight it will be operating in a micro-gravity environment.
Rifath, who is lead scientist at Chennai-based science education organisation Space Kidz India, said: “We designed it completely from scratch.
"It will have a new kind of on-board computer and eight indigenous built-in sensors to measure acceleration, rotation and the magnetosphere of the earth.
"The main challenge was to design an experiment to be flown to space which would fit into a four-metre cube weighing 64 grams”.
Rifath, who comes from a small town in Tamil Nadu, previously built a helium weather balloon as a part of a competition for young scientists when just 15 years old.
At a glance | Brilliant uses for 3D printing
1. A 3D baby scan for a blind mum-to-be:A 3D cast of an ultra-sound scan enabled a blind mother to ‘see’ her unborn baby for the first time.
2. Homes in disaster zones:A 40 foot-tall, 20 foot-wide printer can build structures layer by layer using dirt or clay. The ‘Big Delta’ printer could create homes quickly and energy-efficiently in disaster or war zones.
3. A wheelchair for a two-legged dog:Tumbles the dog was born with only two legs, but he was was given a new lease of life when the Ohio University Innovation Center helped create a bespoke wheelchair to help him get around.
4. A replacement tortoise shell:A tortoise suffering from a painful disease that caused its shell to wear away was given a 3D printed prosthetic shell to protect it. The lightweight prosthetic shell attached using velcro.
5. A life-saving replica heart:A doctor at King’s College London used a 3D-printer to create a life-size plastic copy of a two-year-old’s heart. The model allowed surgeons to determine that they could successfully close the hole.
USA: New York Post
Lauren Tousignant| May 17, 2017 | New York Post
This 18-year-old designed the world’s lightest satellite
This teen literally reached for the stars, and it looks like he made it.
An 18-year-old from India built the world’s lightest satellite — and NASA’s going to send it into space.
Rifath Shaarook created a 4-centimeter (1½-inch), 3D-printed cube that weighs 2¼ ounces, making it lighter than an iPhone.
“We built it completely from scratch,” he told India’s Business Standard. “It will have a new kind of on-board computer and eight indigenous built-in sensors to measure acceleration, rotation and the magnetosphere of the Earth.”
The satellite was one of 80 experiments selected through “Cubes in Space,” a student competition organized by NASA and the education company I Doodle Learning. The contest received more than 86,000 submissions from 57 countries.
NASA will send the tiny box on a four-hour, suborbital spaceflight June 22, but KalamSat will only operate for 12 minutes in a micro-gravity environment.
The up-and-coming scientist told the Times of India that the satellite’s main purpose is to “demonstrate the performance of 3D-printed carbon” and see if the material can withstand the launch.
Shaarook, who also invented a helium weather balloon when he was 15, is the lead scientist at Space Kids India. The Chennai-based organization, which sponsored his submission, promotes science education for Indian children and teens.