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Busting Myths And Spreading Awareness — Young Scientist Body Takes Up Covid-19 Vaccination Cause

Busting Myths And Spreading Awareness — Young Scientist Body Takes Up Covid-19 Vaccination Cause by Karan Kamble - Apr 7, 2021 04:33 AM INYAS has launched its vaccine awareness campaign Snapshot The body will be busting myths and spreading awareness about vaccines in different ways. The world’s largest Covid-19 vaccination programme is underway, but scepticism about vaccines threatens to set the recovery process back. India can ill afford it, especially now when it is riding the second, potentially more severe wave. To clear apprehensions about vaccines, India’s collective of young scientists and engineers launched a nationwide vaccine awareness campaign on Tuesday, 6 April.

IIT Mandi Alumnus wins INYAS National Award 2020 for Research Excellence

Share Mandi: Indian Institute of Technology Mandi alumnus Dr. Navneet Chandra Verma has won the Indian National Young Academy of Sciences (INYAS) National Award 2020 for Research Excellence. Dr. Verma, who completed his Ph.D. from IIT Mandi in 2020, received this award in recognition of his excellent contribution in fundamental understanding of the chemical structure and functional relationship of the carbogenic nanoparticles and their application in super-resolution light microscopy.   Under the supervision of Prof. Chayan Nandi, School of Basic Sciences, IIT Mandi, Dr. Verma custom built the most advanced single molecule super resolution nanoscopic technique, for the first time in India and showed how easily the carbon nanomaterials could be utilized as a fluorescent probe to study the cellular dynamics under live cell condition down to nanometer resolution.

Coronavirus variants with two specific mutations may evade antibodies, says virologist Shahid Jameel

Coronavirus | Variants with two specific mutations may evade antibodies, says virologist Shahid Jameel Updated: Updated: February 21, 2021 20:39 IST The spike protein of the coronavirus enables it to bind to the ACE2 receptor on host cells a process which studies have show to be crucial for the virus to enter the cells and cause infection. Share Article Shahid Jameel, Virologist, and Director, Trivedi School of Biosciences, Ashoka University   The spike protein of the coronavirus enables it to bind to the ACE2 receptor on host cells a process which studies have show to be crucial for the virus to enter the cells and cause infection.

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