Esha khare biography of martin

Esha Khare (born 1995), American student of Indian | World ...

    Eesha Khare (born ) is an American inventor and was a Young Scientist Award winner in the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. She was named one of Forbes' 30 under 30 scientists.

  • Eesha is a PhD Candidate in Materials Science and Engineering at MIT in the Program in Polymers and Soft Matter.
  • Eesha Khare (born 1995) is an American inventor and was a Young Scientist Award winner in the 2013 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. She was named one of Forbes' 30 under 30 scientists.
  • Proud to announce my PhD graduation in Materials Science and Engineering from MIT last spring!
  • Eesha is a PhD Candidate in Materials Science and Engineering at MIT in the Program in Polymers and Soft Matter. She works on developing cutting-edge materials with mechanical properties that can be tuned for applications ranging from self-healing, to soft robotics, to preventing materials from failing.
  • A Material Difference | MIT for a Better World


  • ഇഷ ഖരെ - വിക്കിപീഡിയ

    Eesha is a PhD Candidate in Materials Science and Engineering at MIT in the Program in Polymers and Soft Matter. She works on developing cutting-edge materials with mechanical properties that can be tuned for applications ranging from self-healing, to soft robotics, to preventing materials from failing.

  • esha khare biography of martin
  • Eesha Khare -

    Eesha Khare has always seen a world of matter. The daughter of a hardware engineer and a biologist, she has an insatiable interest in what substances—both synthetic and biological—have in common. Not surprisingly, that perspective led her to the study of materials.


    Esha Khare (born 1995), American student of Indian | World ...

    Eesha Khare is a student of Indian origin who worked to develop a supercapacitor prototype that may charge significantly faster and would last for more charging cycles.

    Esha khare (@___esha_khare___) • Instagram photos and videos

    A passion for biomaterials inspires Eesha Khare, an MIT PhD candidate in materials science and engineering, to tackle climate change.

  • Eesha Khare - Wikipedia Eesha Khare has always seen a world of matter. The daughter of a hardware engineer and a biologist, she has an insatiable interest in what substances—both synthetic and biological—have in common. Not surprisingly, that perspective led her to the study of materials.
  • Eesha Khare - MIT Office of Innovation Eesha Khare is a student of Indian origin who worked to develop a supercapacitor prototype that may charge significantly faster and would last for more charging cycles.
  • Eesha Khare | The Harvard-Cambridge Scholarships Eesha Khare has always seen a world of matter. The daughter of a hardware engineer and a biologist, she has an insatiable interest in what substances — both synthetic and biological — have in common. Not surprisingly, that perspective led her to the study of materials.

  • MIT News: A material difference - MIT Office of Innovation

    Eesha Khare has always seen a world of matter. The daughter of a hardware engineer and a biologist, she has an insatiable interest in what substances — both synthetic and biological — have in common. Not surprisingly, that perspective led her to the study of materials.

    A Material Difference | MIT for a Better World

  • Eesha Khare was an Engineering Sciences concentrator and lived in Leverett House. Her secondary field was Chemistry. She was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in her junior year and is a John Harvard Scholar.

  • Congratulations to year-old Eesha Khare of Saratoga, California for winning the Intel Foundation Young Scientist Award! A passion for biomaterials inspires Eesha Khare, an MIT PhD candidate in materials science and engineering, to tackle climate change.


      Saratoga Teen's Research Takes Science World By Storm

    Eesha Khare (born ) is an American inventor and was a Young Scientist Award winner in the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. She was named one of Forbes' 30 under 30 scientists.