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Meet Chanda Prosper, Age, Profile, Pictures

Details About Chanda Prosper History, Bio, Wiki, Education, Parents, Family, Net Worth, Height, Siblings, Age, Birthday, Date of Birth, Images



Who Is Chanda Prosper?




Biography Wikipedia: Chanda Prosper (born 8 March 2008) is a Zambian theoretical physics researcher.

Chanda Prosper is a 17-year-old young African scientist from Zambia whose work includes original contributions in unified physics frameworks and has been published on Zenodo and OSF. He has also been featured by TechTrends Africa and DailyGood.

Chanda Prosper was born on 8 March 2008 in Kasama, Zambia. He is Bemba by tribe and a christian by religion. 

Chanda Prosper celebrates his 18th birthday on the 8th of March 2008.


Speaking in an interview with Thefamousnaija, Chanda Prosper gave an insight into his background:


When I was three years old, I cried to go to school—not because other children were going, but because something inside me felt incomplete without learning. My father was a teacher, and every morning I watched him walk to the classroom. I wanted to be part of that world of questions and answers so badly that I would not stop crying until I was allowed to attend school. That decision changed my life forever. 

Within a week of starting school, I was solving simple algebraic equations . By the end of that first year, I sat for the Grade One examinations and ranked first in my class at just three years old—a time when most children in Zambia begin school at seven or eight.

My father became concerned that I was too young and withdrew me from school for two years, but when I officially restarted at five, the hunger for learning was already deeply rooted in me. From Grade One through Grade Seven, and again from Grade Ten through Grade Twelve, I ranked first in class. But it was never easy. While others focused on exams and textbooks, I wrestled with questions far beyond the syllabus: How did the universe begin? Could gravity alone explain reality? Even at ten or eleven years old, I questioned the Big Bang theory—not out of rebellion, but from a desire for deeper coherence.

That restlessness pushed me into independent research. At fourteen, without mentorship or institutional support, I wrote my first research paper proposing two frameworks—harmonic mathematics and harmonic physics—to explore forces often treated as negligible in dominant models. The ideas were not successful; they conflicted with established theories. I set them aside, but I did not abandon the discipline of questioning.

Many of my peers did not understand what I was doing. “Young researcher” sounded more like confusion than praise. While others focused on exams, I focused on problems without marking schemes. I grew up as a book-oriented learner. My father would ask what materials I needed and provide them. My mother supported me consistently. They valued education even before they understood what I was doing.

I taught myself through university lectures from institutions such as MIT, Cambridge, Oxford, and Stanford. When I encountered a problem I could not solve, I wrote it down and tested every method I knew. If nothing worked, I went for a walk and thought. If that failed, I slept. Often I woke with a clearer solution. The mind needs space before it recognizes structure.

By the end of 2025, at seventeen, I had earned eight diplomas and six certificates in areas including computer vision, aerodynamics, and electric mechanics. I continued publishing research. My Unified Position Equation, an attempt to connect general relativity, quantum mechanics, and electromagnetism, was accepted for publication in the Global Scientific Journal.

 I was also formally informed that I had received the Philippines Excellency Award from the Global Research Conference for my independent contributions.

In September 2025 I became the youngest member of the World Research Fellows of London. In December 2025 I was selected as the youngest member of the African Materials Research Society. People often call me a genius or a prodigy. I intentionally drop those titles. I do not believe I am more talented than others. I believe in disciplined persistence. Consistency, not labels, determines outcomes.

I founded Genius Hub, a research organization for young people around the world, because I know how isolating intellectual curiosity can feel. Research should not be limited by age. It begins with a question you refuse to ignore.

Today, my goal is clear. I intend to study Aerospace Engineering at Xi’an Jiaotong University. 

Aerospace gives direction to flight; electrical engineering gives it control and precision. Together, they form the foundation for the systems I hope to design in the future. I see myself becoming a professor and researcher, contributing to global advancements in physics, aerospace engineering, and intelligent systems. I intend to earn a PhD, publish in leading international journals, and become the mentor I once needed at fourteen.

I study scientists such as Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein, and Nikola Tesla. What inspires me most is not their recognition, but their endurance. The world does not always recognize significance while it is unfolding, and that does not reduce its value. Passion is not something you wait for; it is something you pursue the moment you recognize it. You don’t find your passion by waiting for it to find you. You find it by paying attention to what you are most exposed to, most drawn toward, and most unable to leave alone—and then you follow it, not because everyone else does, but because something inside you won’t let you do anything else.





Source Thefamousnaija

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