Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition
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Stands at the BT Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition in January, 2005.
The BT Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition (Irish: Taispeántas na nEolaí Óga agus Teicneoilíochta), commonly called "the Young Scientist", is an annual competition held in Dublin, Ireland every January for encouraging interest in science in secondary and primary schools, currently sponsored by BT Ireland. There were 1,616 entries for the 2009 contest[1], five hundred of which were selected for the Exhibition at the Royal Dublin Society. In each and Technology Exhibition advance to participate in international events such as the European Union Contest for Young Scientists and the Stockholm International Youth Science Seminar.
[edit] Recent winners
- 2009: 14 year old John D. O'Callaghan and 13 year old Liam McCarthy , 2nd year students from Kinsale Community School, Co. Cork with their groundbreaking test to establish the health of cattle using washing up liquid titled The development of a convenient test method for somatic cell count and its importance in milk production won the overall award 2009 BT Young Scientist. They are the first group in recent years to win the overall prize. Their school also won the most awards that year, receiving 8 in total (including 4 category firsts apart from the over all) and 3 special awards.
- 2008: Emer Jones from Presentation Secondary School, Tralee, became the youngest ever person to win the competition with her project Research and Development of Emergency Sandbag Shelters at the age of 13. Interestingly, Emer's father is a lecturer in structural engineering[2]. She has gone on to represent Ireland at the EU contest for young scientists in Copenhagen in September 2008.
- 2007: Abdusalam Abubakar from Synge Street CBS, Dublin, was the winner with his project on RSA encryption codes. He then went on to take first place in the 19th EU contest for young scientists in Valencia.
- 2006: Aisling Judge (14) from Kinsale Community School was awarded the overall title for her project The development and evaluation of a biological food spoilage indicator. She became the first junior category winner in the history of the competition. In her project she produced a food indicator to let any member of the public say how fresh a food is regardless of the storage conditions. Judge competed in the 18th EU Contest for Young Scientists in Stockholm and although being the youngest competitor, she won third place.
- 2005: Patrick Collison from Castletroy College,Limerick was the winner of the competition for his project Croma: a new dialect of Lisp. His project produced a new programming language designed for making web pages. The name Croma is an anagram of macro, which is a central part of the language. He went on to take second place at the 17th European Contest for Young Scientists in Moscow. At the age of 19, Collison, together with his brother John, sold their software company Auctomatic for €3 million. [3]
- 2004: Ronan Larkin from Synge Street CBS, Dublin, was the winner of the competition for his project Generalised Continued Fractions. His project concerned new techniques for solving difficult mathematical equations.
- 2003: Adnan Osmani was the winner for his project The graphical technological and user-friendly advancement of the Internet browser: XWebs. His project involved the development of a new networking socket and web browser that enabled faster Internet access even with an ordinary modem, and without compressing data either.Adnan is awaiting a patent pending on his invention which was filed for in 2003.
- 2002: David Michael O'Doherty, a student of Gonzaga College, was the winner for his project The Distribution of the Primes and the Underlying Order to Chaos. He is now a mathematics undergraduate in the University of Cambridge. His prize was for research into the second Hardy–Littlewood conjecture, an unsolved problem in number theory which concerns the number of primes in intervals.
- 2001: Peter Taylor, Shane Browne and Michael O'Toole were winners for their project Investigating symmetrical shapes formed by polygons. They solved a problem in geometry concerning how regular polygons can be arranged into circular patterns of optimum symmetry.
- 2000: Thomas Gernon was the winner for his project The Geography and Mathematics of Europe’s Urban Centres. This was the first time in the competition's 36-year history that a Social & Behavioural Sciences project won the top award. Gernon is currently lecturer of geology at Trinity College Dublin. In 2004, he graduated with First Class Honours in Geology from University College Dublin, and went on to complete a Ph.D. at the Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol. His research on the dynamics of volcanic eruptions has taken him from diamond mines in Botswana and Arctic Canada, to many active volcanoes around the world, including those of Iceland, Italy, Greece and Far Eastern Siberia.
- 1999: Sarah Flannery was the winner for her project Cryptography - A new algorithm versus the RSA. She researched a new cryptographic algorithm, the Cayley–Purser algorithm, involving matrix algebra which was faster than the RSA (which depends on the difficulty in factoring large integers). Flannery leapt to fame as the speed improvements attracted the attention of the press. Subsequent study showed that the algorithm, while faster, was not secure enough to replace the RSA. She wrote a book on her algorithm and number theory in general called "In Code: A Mathematical Journey" (ISBN 0-7611-2384-9). Sarah Flannery's project also received a first prize at the 11th European Union Contest for Young Scientists in Thessaloniki, Greece. Flannery gained a BA in Computer Science from the University of Cambridge in 2003. She worked for Wolfram Research for a period and in 2006 is working with the EA Software Company in California..
- 1998: Raphael Hurley was the winner of the competition for his project The Mathematics of Monopoly. In his project he determined a system for optimally selecting properties in the board game Monopoly, based on the probability of a player landing on those properties. He gained a BSc (Hons) Joint Honours in Mathematics and Applied Mathematics from University College Cork in 2005. In February 2006 he was named UCC Graduate of the Year.