These 60 Hyderabad kids are falling in love with astronomy at BMBSC. Do you know how? – EdexLive

All those students who aim to reach for the stars, quite literally, to pursue a career inAstronomyor just want to understand the cosmos better are a part of the ongoingWinter School onAstronomybeing conducted atBM Birla Science Centrein Hyderabad from February 16 to 21. The fourth edition of the five-day camp is being attended by 60 space enthusiasts selected carefully from over 700 applicants. "We just want to offer a platform where students get to know about high-end Science and what's actually happening in the field," saysPranav Sharma, Scientific Officer and Curator of the Space Museum. What this school does is effectively combine talks with hands-on workshops which gives the participants, who are senior undergraduate and postgraduate students, a clear path that they could take towardsAstronomy. Students are participating from across India and care was taken to ensure a gender-balanced ratio; students from Tier II and III cities were given preference.

Another point to note about the school is that students from diverse backgrounds and an inclination towardsAstronomywere selected. "Interdisciplinary studies need to be encouraged and students should understand that disciplines don't have any borders," says the three-time winner of the REX Karmaveer Chakra Award. Especially with the advent of Computer Science and Big Data, everything has changed, he asserts.

What was new this year is a talk and workshop on Computational Astrophysics by none other than Prof Ashish Mahabal, anastronomerand Lead Computational and Data Scientist at the California Institute of Technology. In fact, this was what this year's session started with on February 16. On February 17 was a talk on Big Data and Deep Learning inAstronomyand Biology by Prof Ajit Kembhavi, Professor Emeritus at the Inter-University Centre forAstronomyand Astrophysics, Pune, that was also the need of the hour, as per the 27-year-old. On the last day, a talk on 'New Insights and Challenges in Probing our Nearest Star: The Sun' by Prof Siraj Hasan, former Director of the Indian Institute of Astrophysics, Bengaluru, will enthrallthe participants.

The response, needless to say, is exceptional. Many discussions, including off-stage ones, are going on wherein experts from academia and students were seen engrossed in intense talks. "This offered a great chance for the senior academicians to interact with students, something that they don't get to do on a regular basis," says the Agra-born curator.Pranav asserts that the scope ofAstronomyin India is expanding and students can make the most of it if they wish. "With projects like the CERN collaboration and the Thirty Meter Telescope that India has taken on, youngsters interested in the field have enough to look forward to," he says and concludes.

Other interesting sessions:- The Exciting World of Neutrinos by Prof Sanjib Agarwalla from Institute of Physics, Bhubaneswar- Exhibition on various sizes of kytoons (kite balloons)- The Romance ofAstronomyby Pranav Sharma, Curator of the Space Museum- Twenty Five Years of Exoplanets: What Have We Learned So Far? by Prof Manoj Puravankara, TIFR, Mumbai

Scenes from the previous schools

For more on them, visit: astrowin19.wixsite.com/astrowin20

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These 60 Hyderabad kids are falling in love with astronomy at BMBSC. Do you know how? - EdexLive

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