Chemistry

I started learning Chemistry in depth after International Junior Science Olympiad. One thing I have learnt is to never underestimate ideas. I have used concepts that I learnt as "just a side idea" to solve multiple questions.

Math and Physics

This is not just math or physics and I understand these sections shouldn't be clubbed together, but this is a trade-off for wanting to be concise.

Math

It's a part of me, I feel like it comes naturally to me. I would want to master the applications of calculus in three dimensions. I've been living in the world of trigonometry and trying to go deeper in the proofs since I was 11 years old. Still, every time I open a textbook or find an interesting problem, it never fails to fascinate me how math and language makes understanding of all difficult ideas possible for human brain ().

some more about math and then works

Physics

why i like physics

Quantum Computing

took a course, didn't find time to explore it further but would be interested to find its links with chemisty

Teaching

I started teaching students during the pandemic because they couldn't attend schools. These were the students who did not have access to internet, devices, or even schools (some schools never cared to set up an online system for students). While teaching I realized solving the problem for 20 students is good but why not try and solve it for more students? That's how Fun Learing Youth was born.

I have a rule, whatever I earn from educational institutions: school prizes, math awards, etc. I donate it to something. For the last 4.5 years, I have been doing so with education.