Youngest “Solo” Physics Researcher from South Asia: TBWR Officially Recognizes Supradip Das Dalal

In a world where scientific research often depends on laboratory access, institutional facilities, mentors, and large academic networks, the journey of an independent young researcher stands out as a rare and inspiring achievement. The Book of World Records (TBWR) is proud to announce the official recognition of Supradip Das Dalal (India) as a World Record Holder for the title:

“The Youngest ‘Solo’ PHYSICS Researcher (South Asia)”

This record is more than just a certification it reflects the spirit of youth innovation, deep scientific curiosity, and independent academic excellence.

The Youngest Solo PHYSICS Researcher

Supradip Das Dalal has been officially recognized by TBWR as:

The youngest individual (within age 20 years) from South Asia to complete and publish core Physics research works fully solo, including original calculations, graphs, plots, and visualizations, in an international journal (IJSREM), with publications indexed on ResearchGate.

This is an important distinction because it recognizes not only the publication of research papers, but also the degree of independence—where the work includes:

  • Concept selection and research planning

  • Physics-based mathematical derivations and calculations

  • Plotting, graphs, visualization structure

  • Scientific interpretation and explanation

  • Written manuscript preparation

  • Final submission and publication process

In other words, the record recognizes the achievement as a complete “solo” research contribution.


Who is Supradip Das Dalal?

Supradip Das Dalal is a young researcher from:

📍 Suri, Birbhum, West Bengal, India (South Asia)

At a notably young age, Supradip demonstrated academic depth and dedication by conducting research in core physics concepts that are fundamental to mechanics and motion studies. What makes this case remarkable is not only his ability to publish scientific work but to do so independently—without a university-backed laboratory environment.

His achievement reflects the growing power of:

  • self-learning

  • digital tools

  • open-access publishing

  • online scientific indexing platforms

  • science communication through videos and visualization


The Certified Research Publications (Verified Evidence)

As part of the record verification, TBWR reviewed public research publication links and indexing evidence. The certified record attempt is supported by published work in IJSREM (International Journal of Scientific Research in Engineering and Management).

Research Themes Verified

Supradip’s research focuses on key topics in Physics such as:

✅ Projectile Motion

Projectile motion is one of the most studied concepts in classical mechanics. It relates to the motion of objects launched into the air under the influence of gravity.

✅ Centre of Mass

The centre of mass represents the single point where the mass of an object can be considered concentrated. It is vital in understanding mechanics, stability, trajectories, and systems of particles.

To strengthen the educational impact of his work, Supradip also supported his research with visualization-style content.


Why This Record Matters: The Rise of Independent Young Researchers

Historically, scientific research was limited to institutions. But today, the research landscape is changing. With access to online learning resources, open academic platforms, and software tools, young individuals can:

  • learn advanced physics

  • write scientific manuscripts

  • generate graphs and mathematical models

  • publish research

  • communicate science through digital media

This record is meaningful because it shows that a young student from a developing region can compete in academic publishing through discipline and intellectual effort.

TBWR believes this achievement sends a strong message:

Scientific excellence is not restricted by geography—it is shaped by passion, knowledge, and perseverance.

Science Communication: A New Standard of Research Excellence

Scientific research does not end at publication—it must also be understood. In Supradip’s record, one more outstanding feature was noticed: he created visual educational content explaining key concepts.

This is extremely valuable because many scientific papers remain unread by common learners. Visualization bridges the gap between:

  • scientific knowledge

  • student understanding

  • real-world learning

For TBWR, this reflects not just academic achievement but also leadership in education and youth science promotion.


Message from TBWR: Congratulations on a Verified Achievement

TBWR congratulates Supradip Das Dalal on earning the status of:

🏆 Official World Record Holder – TBWR Certified

This title is a recognition that his research work meets TBWR standards of verification and contributes meaningfully to scientific learning.

World record holders represent benchmarks for others. This record encourages students across South Asia and beyond to pursue scientific study not only as learning, but as active contribution.


Inspiration for Students: What Young Learners Can Take From This Record

Supradip’s story offers powerful lessons to students worldwide:

Start early – curiosity is a strength
Be consistent – research is built on discipline
Master fundamentals – Physics begins with basics
Document everything – records require proof
Publish responsibly – make knowledge accessible
Keep learning – independent learning is the future

World records are not only about being “the biggest” or “the fastest.” Some records define a deeper milestone such as intellectual achievement, personal discipline, and youthful ambition.

The recognition of Supradip Das Dalal as the Youngest “Solo” Physics Researcher (South Asia) reflects exactly that spirit.

TBWR is honored to certify this achievement and looks forward to recognizing more young record setters who inspire the world through knowledge and innovation.

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