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KV girl is global physics champ

Hamsa Padmanabhan, a 16-year-old from Pune, has bagged three prestigious international awards for her research project in physics. The Class XI student of Kendriya Vidyalaya, won the awards for the same paper on May 12 from three different US organisations.

Published on: May 17, 2006 11:26 AM IST
None | By , Pune
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Hamsa Padmanabhan, a 16-year-old from Pune, has bagged three prestigious international awards for her research project in physics. The Class XI student of Kendriya Vidyalaya, Pune, won the awards for the same paper on May 12 from three different US organisations.

Her 15-page research paper, titled ‘Physics of a simple prototype for static magnetic levitation’, won the $1,500 second prize in physics at the Grand Awards by the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in Indianapolis in the US.

HT Image
HT Image



About 1,500 students from 47 countries competed for nearly $4 million in scholarships and prizes at the fair. The teenager also bagged the first prize award of $2,000 in Physics from United Technologies Corp for excellence in the science and engineering category.

“We are very thrilled with the awards and we hope she pursues her interest in physics,” Thanu Padmanabhan, Hamsa’s father, said. Hamsa was one of the eight students from India in the final contest at the world’s pre-college science competition in the US.

They were selected out of 150 short-listed students at the Intel science talent discovery fair held in December 2005 at Bangalore. In 2004, she won the gold medal at the All India Test for Class IX students, conducted by Educational Initiatives — an organisation started by IIM-Ahmedabad alumni.

 
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