ICTP has awarded its 2013 ICTP Prize to two women for research
in the fields of high energy physics and solar energy
materials.
Physicists Yasaman Farzan of the Institute for Research in
Fundamental Sciences, Iran, and Patchanita Thamyongkit of
Chulalongkorn University, Thailand, share this year's prize for two
very different areas of cutting-edge research.
Professor Farzan, a former Junior Associate of ICTP, specializes
in neutrino research. The ICTP Prize cites her theoretical
contributions to the physics of neutrinos, which have important
consequences for astrophysical observations and experiments at
CERN's Large Hadron Collider (read the full citation
here).
Professor Thamyongkit's interests lie in organic chemistry, in
particular in the exploration of light-harvesting materials for
solar energy. The ICTP Prize recognizes her experimental chemistry
contributions to organic, conjugated, and semiconducting materials
of great relevance for photovoltaic research (read full citation
here).
The ICTP Prize was created in 1982. It recognizes young scientists
(under 40) from developing countries who work and live in those
countries and who have made outstanding and original contributions
to physics or mathematics. The prize includes a sculpture,
certificate and a cash award of €3,000. For further details, see
the ICTP
Prize webpage.
Each year, the ICTP Prize is given in honour of a scientist who
has made outstanding contributions to the field in which the prize
is given. The 2013 ICTP Prize honours Marie Curie, who became the
first woman to win a Nobel Prize and the only person to win the
award in two different science fields (physics and chemistry).
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2013 ICTP Prize Recipients Announced
This year's prize honours neutrino, energy research
Publishing Date