Siyabulela Lethuxolo Xuza: Yes, it is rocket science
05 March 2012
"
Seen here during a class at Harvard, Siyabulela Xuza is one of
the new young generation of Africans who are committed to developing the
continent's potential. (Image: Harvard School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences) "
Engineering whizzkid
Siyabulela Lethuxolo Xuza is a young man with a big future.
From the early days of experimenting
with science in his mother’s kitchen in the poor community of Mthatha in the
Eastern Cape, to international science and engineering accolades, he is now a
role model for South Africa’s aspiring scientists.
These days the darling of
Nasa, who were so taken with him that they gave him a personal guided tour of
their facilities, is the youngest member of the Africa 2.0 energy advisory panel.
The pan-African
organisation comprises the continent’s brightest minds and is committed to
seeking sustainable solutions to challenges faced by Africans.
In a March 2012 interview
with US television network CBS, Xuza said that his current work is focusing on
transforming homes into power plants "that capture the energy of the sun
during the day and store some of it in fuel cells, for use at night".
Starting young
In his own words, Xusa
described the moment that sparked his lifelong passion for science.
“I was chasing the roar of
a Cessna plane dropping election pamphlets over Mthatha, my South African
township,” he wrote on the America.gov
website.
“It was 1994, the first
year of a new democracy in my country, and the sight of that technological
marvel ignited in me a curiosity for science and a passion for using technology
to engineer an African renaissance.”
He was just five years old
at the time. The youngster was also later inspired by South African
entrepreneur Mark Shuttleworth’s trip into space in 2002, an event that was
largely responsible for his long-standing interest in rocketry.
His mother's kitchen soon
became the scene for much experimentation with formulations of jet and rocket
fuel, but the informal laboratory had to be moved to the garage after a sticky
incident with a too-hot stove.
Xuza wasn’t deterred, and
over the next few years he continued to work on the project, which culminated
in the successful launch of a real home-built rocket, the Phoenix. This vehicle
achieved a final height of over a kilometre and earned him the junior South
African amateur high-powered altitude record.
The rocket was propelled by
Xuza’s own invention, a cheaper, safer type of rocket fuel, which became the
subject of a project titled African Space: Fuelling Africa's quest to space. It
won a gold medal in the 2006 Eskom National Science
Expo as well as a trip to the Nobel Prize ceremony in Sweden,
where he presented his work to the Swedish king and queen.
The same project took him
to the 58th Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in Albuquerque,
New Mexico, as part of Team South Africa.
Here the project was
entered in the energy and transport category and won the 18-year-old, then a
matric pupil on a scholarship at St John’s College
in Johannesburg, a Best of Category award and a First award.
Xuza also received the
honour of having a celestial body named after him by the MIT Lincoln
Laboratory, which is replacing the complicated scientific names of thousands of
minor planets with more accessible names in honour of the world’s top achievers.
The minor planet 23182 Siyaxuza
circles the solar system in the main asteroid belt near Jupiter and takes 4.01
years to complete a single orbit. It was discovered in July 2000.
Xuza has garnered numerous
other accolades, including a fellowship in 2010 of the African Leadership Network, and in
2011 he was made a fellow of the international student-run Kairos Society.
Membership to this global body is by invitation only.
A bright future
Matriculating in 2007 with
a string of As, it was almost guaranteed that Xuza would take up further
studies at a prestigious institution – that turned out to be Harvard’s School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences, where he became one of just 1 948 students
accepted out of about 28 000 who applied.
He started his engineering
degree in September 2008, but wasn’t afraid to take up academic challenges such
as debating, the Mandarin language, and world music. These interests, he said,
would broaden his mind.
The young man from the
Eastern Cape also joined the Harvard Forum for International Leadership, a
society that brings together students from all around the world to discuss
global issues such as HIV/Aids, terrorism and the development of emerging
economies, as well as the need for efficient energy solutions.
“I may not be able to
predict what the future holds,” he wrote on www.america.gov,
“but I am excited at how my engineering education will enable me to achieve my
aspirations for Africa.”
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