APS News

Bringing Home the Gold From Zurich

All U.S. Physics Olympiad students bring home medals from world competition

July 22, 2016 | Rachel Gaal

Returning from a weeklong competition in Switzerland and Liechtenstein, the U.S. physics team placed high in the rankings of the 47th International Physics Olympiad, earning two gold and three silver medals. China, Taiwan, and Korea each had five golds; Russia four; India and Japan three. Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Romania each got two golds, in addition to the U.S. The U.S. tied for 7th place overall in the medal counts.

During the international competition, students are given experimental and theoretical challenges: tinkering with hands-on equipment and working “plug-and-chug” conceptual problems. The cumulative scores ranked teams and individuals by medals, including honorable mentions. Hosted at the University of Zurich, the location offered inspiration to the five young physicists — in 1905, Albert Einstein was awarded his Ph.D. from the same institution.

“The three theory questions were on mechanics, nonlinear circuits, and subatomic particle detection,” wrote Paul Stanley of Beloit College, the U.S. team’s academic director, in an email. “The uniqueness of the mechanics question was that it was a dialogue between two students about if it was possible to distinguish earth gravity from a space station artificial gravity. The nonlinear circuit was based on the thyristor, and was possibly the hardest ‘easy’ question on the exam. The particle physics question was clearly in homage to CERN.”

Added Stanley, “the two experimental questions dealt with a four-point resistance measurement of thin films and bifurcation behavior of excited poppy seeds. As the poppy seed problem, with spontaneous seed sorting at some excitation ranges, produced unexpected results for most students, it might have been the most entertaining and counter intuitive experiment in years.”

Taking home medals for the U.S. were Abijith Krishnan (gold, 16th place); Jason Lu (gold, tied for 17th); Srijon Mukherjee (silver, 50th place); Jimmy Qin (silver, tied for 53rd place); and Vincent Liu (silver, tied for 75th place).

While the exams ramped up their adrenalin levels, the 400 competitors were immersed in a great cultural and professional excursion, connecting with students representing 87 countries. The Department of Physics at the University of Zurich, the Office of Education of Liechtenstein, and Associations of Swiss Scientific Olympiads recruited hundreds of volunteers to help organize an array of activities and facility tours to spark interest in the budding physicists.

“The midterm party was a highlight for all,” wrote Stanley. “After the exams, [we were] called to attention by a trio of alpine horns…. We could play the alpine horn ([with a] prize to whoever could hold the note the longest)… We could milk cows (fake cows, but realistic milking seats), toss chickens with slingshots (a fake chicken, but evidently a real sport, where you catch it in a frying pan), hammer nails, shoot arrows, and cut logs with a two-person long saw.“

The U.S. team is organized by the American Association of Physics Teachers, with sponsorship from a number of scientific societies, including the American Physical Society.

Physics Olympiad Gold

Photo: Paul Stanley/Beloit College

The 2016 U.S. Physics Olympiad team and their medals. (L-R) Vincent Liu (silver), Jimmy Qin (silver), Tabijith Krishnan (gold), Srijon Mukherjee (silver), and Jason Lu (gold).

Related Information

Gray Arrow Final Results
Gray Arrow U.S. Team Member Biographies