By ANI
GORAKHPUR: Students from a Gorakhpur faculty have made a missile prototype that they declare will grow to be inactive when it comes close to any college, faculty, hospital, or non secular place.
The missile prototype has been made by the BCA college students of the Institute of Technology and Management (ITM) at GIDA, Gorakhpur.
Students with the Kavach missile
prototype (Photo | ANI)
On the event of ‘International Peace Day’ on September 21 (Thursday), college students demonstrated their Kavach missile prototype in ITM College and gave the message of creating peace and non-violence on this planet.
“It took more than 8 days for the students to make the prototype of this Kavach missile, and it cost about Rs 8,000 to make,” mentioned Amit Shrivastav, a pupil concerned in making the prototype.
“We used IR sensors in this and transmitters will be installed in civilian areas. As soon as the missile comes within the chip range. The chip will send a signal and the missile will be defused and wherever the missile falls, it will not explode,” mentioned Khushi Tripathi, a pupil concerned in making the prototype.
Vineet Roy, the top processor of the mechanical engineering division of ITM, mentioned the primary goal was to create a system whereby if a missile is headed in the direction of a civilian space, it may be deactivated.
GORAKHPUR: Students from a Gorakhpur faculty have made a missile prototype that they declare will grow to be inactive when it comes close to any college, faculty, hospital, or non secular place.
The missile prototype has been made by the BCA college students of the Institute of Technology and Management (ITM) at GIDA, Gorakhpur.
Students with the Kavach missile
prototype (Photo | ANI)On the event of ‘International Peace Day’ on September 21 (Thursday), college students demonstrated their Kavach missile prototype in ITM College and gave the message of creating peace and non-violence on this planet. googletag.cmd.push(perform() googletag.show(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); );
“It took more than 8 days for the students to make the prototype of this Kavach missile, and it cost about Rs 8,000 to make,” mentioned Amit Shrivastav, a pupil concerned in making the prototype.
“We used IR sensors in this and transmitters will be installed in civilian areas. As soon as the missile comes within the chip range. The chip will send a signal and the missile will be defused and wherever the missile falls, it will not explode,” mentioned Khushi Tripathi, a pupil concerned in making the prototype.
Vineet Roy, the top processor of the mechanical engineering division of ITM, mentioned the primary goal was to create a system whereby if a missile is headed in the direction of a civilian space, it may be deactivated.