Seventeen scientists from scientific institutions across India have been awarded the Swarnajayanti Fellowships’ for their innovative research ideas and the potential of creating impact on R&D in different disciplines.
Scientists selected for the award will be allowed to pursue unfettered research with a freedom and flexibility in terms of expenditure as approved in the research plan.
The scientists with proven track record and selected through a rigorous three layered screening process will pursue basic research in frontier areas of science and technology.
The Swanajayanti Fellowship scheme was instituted by Govt. of India to commemorate India’s fiftieth year of Independence. Under the scheme the awardees are facilitated by the Department of Science & Technology, GOI with support for all the requirements for performing the research including a fellowship of Rs. 25,000/- per month for five years. In addition, DST supports the awardees by giving them a research grant of 5 lakh Rupees for 5 years. The fellowship is provided in addition to the salary they draw from their parent Institution. In addition to fellowship, grants for equipment, computational facilities, consumables, contingencies, national and international travel and other special requirements, are covered based on merit.
Annexure
The awardees include:
Dr. Siddhesh S. Kamat, Indian Institute of Science Education & Research Pune in life science: He studies the biological mechanisms of lipid signaling pathways in the mammalian nervous and immune system. He aims to provide new insights and therapeutic paradigms for orphan and/or emerging human neurological and immunological diseases.
Dr. Sridharan Devarajan, Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru in life science. His area of work is Cognition, Computation and Behaviour encompassing ‘how does our brain enable us to pay attention selectively to some things, and to ignore others or what happens in the brain when we make important decisions’. His research focuses on understanding the neural basis of cognitive phenomena such as selective attention and decision making.
Dr. Niti Kumar, CSIR-Central Drug Research Institute, Lucknow, in life science. Her research is focused towards understanding protein quality control machinery in human malaria parasite for exploration of alternative drug targets for malaria intervention. She is also involved in antimalarial screening for identification of scaffolds effective against drug-resistant malaria
Dr. Nitin Gupta, Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur in life science. He works to understand the remarkable capabilities organized by the brain — from seeing to singing, from remembering to running. His research involves the electrical activity of neurons help them interact forming circuits which encode innate behavioral preferences.
Dr. Modhu Sudan Maji, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, Kharagpur in Chemical Science. His research areas are Cobalt-catalyzed C-H bond functionalizations, sequential catalysis, design, synthesis and application of tunable nano grapheme and total synthesis of alkaloids.
Dr. Sakya Singha Sen, CSIR - National Chemical Laboratory, Pune in Chemical Science. He and his team is exploring main group compounds in homogeneous catalysis as surrogates for precious metals for developing greener, safer, and more cost-effective chemical processes.
Dr. Chandramouli Subramaniam is from Indian Institute of Technology Bombay in Chemical Science. He works on understanding of the structure-property relations of nano-form of carbon allotropes - Carbon nanotubes (CNTs), graphene and related doped nanocarbons such as nitrogen and boron-doped CNTs and grapheme. He uses nano carbon based functional composites for developing sensors and actuators, especially related to biological systems.
Dr. Atul Abhay Dixit, Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar, in Mathematical Seicnce. His research is at the interface of analytic number theory and special functions. His work in number theory has led him to discover new interesting special functions such as generalised modified Bessel and Hurwitz zeta functions.
Dr. Mousomi Bhakta, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Pune in Mathematical Science. She studies the existence, multiplicity of positive and sign-changing solutions to local and nonlocal elliptic equations applying tools from nonlinear analysis and to study various qualitative properties of solutions e.g. radial symmetry, regularity, apriori estimate, etc.
Dr. Ujjwal Koley, TIFR in Mathematical Science. His areas of work are Hyperbolic PDEs, Conservation Laws, Numerical Analysis, Dispersive Equations and Stochastic Balance Laws. The main aim of his research has been to design mathematical tools and robust numerical algorithms and to apply them to interesting problems that arise in the physical sciences.
Dr. Arvind Singh, Physical Research Laboratory, Ahmedabad in Earth & Atmospheric Science. His area of work is marine nitrogen cycle, ocean biogeochemistry, marine C:N:P stoichiometry, anthropogenic impacts on marine nitrogen cycling, climate change and isotopic fractionation processes. His expertise lies in using the stable isotopes of carbon (13C) and nitrogen (15N) to understand the oceanic processes with a strong focus on biological nitrogen fixation and primary production.
Dr. Subhro Bhattacharjee, International Centre for Theoretical Sciences- TIFR, Bengaluru in Physical Science. He works on quantum many-body physics and focuses on magnetism (Frustrated magnets, quantum spin liquids), topological phases of condensed matter and physics of transition metal oxides (Interplay of spin-orbit coupling and electron correlations), Strongly correlated metals and Many-body Chaos.
Dr. Pabitra Kumar Nayak, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Hyderabad in Physical Science. His area of work is soft semiconductor materials development, photovoltaics, optoelectronic devices, defect management and electronic doping of soft semiconductor.
Dr. Shamik Banerjee is from Institute of Physics, Bhubaneswar in Physical Science.
Dr. Rishi Raj is from Indian Institute of Technology Patna in Engineering Science. His major fields of interest are energy, boiling, condensation, micro-/nano-Scale Thermal and fluidic transport, colloids and interface science, microgravity science.
Dr. Mayank Shrivastava, Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru in Engineering Science. He works on science and technology of electron devices focusing on power semiconductor devices as well as nanoscale / beyond Si CMOS for SoC applications. He also works on a multitude of science threads like physics of semiconductor device reliability, electro-thermal/electron – phonon interaction in beyond Si materials/devices, thermometry and thermal/phonon transport in these materials/devices.
Dr. Amartya Mukhopadhyay, Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay in Engineering Science. He works on materials for electrochemical energy storage and advanced structural ceramics/composites like electrode materials and electrode/electrolyte interfaces for Li/Na/K-ion batteries, solid electrolytes Li-ion and Na-ion batteries, electrochemical energy storage devices, development of bulk polycrystalline ‘ceramic alloys’, carbon nanotube reinforced ceramic composites and ultra-high temperature ceramics/composites.