'Brilliant... it's best moment in my life'

The BT Young Scientist for 2006 is the youngest winner in the 42-year history of the event, writes Dick Ahlstrom , Science Editor…

The BT Young Scientist for 2006 is the youngest winner in the 42-year history of the event, writes Dick Ahlstrom, Science Editor

Kinsale student Aisling Judge (14) last night claimed first prize in the annual competition at the Royal Dublin Society with a biology project that greatly impressed the judging panel.

A second-year student from Kinsale Community College, Aisling took the €5,000 award and trophy in her youthful stride.

She said winning was "so brilliant. It is the best moment in my life."

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Aisling developed a simple and inexpensive warning device built into food packaging that can warn the consumer if the food inside has gone off.

This year's awards were notable for a number of reasons, not just Aisling's record-breaking youth.

Students from CBS Synge Street in Dublin claimed two of the top four awards, both with advanced maths projects. Its students claimed a second place last year and were outright winners in 2004, a remarkable performance given the tough competition seen at the RDS year after year.

The new Irish have also had a notable impact on the 2006 event. The best group project winners, Synge Street fifth years Keith Florea, Adrian Chisa and Sandeep Sihag hail from Romania and India, respectively. They developed a more accurate way to calculate the position of an orbiting satellite.

The runner-up individual project winner Gohar Abbasi, again from Synge Street CBS, is originally from Pakistan. His project may transform the way stock markets trade options with a new method to calculate stock and commodity option prices.

The runner-up group project award went to three transition-year students from Presentation Secondary School in Kilkenny. Tara McGrath, Vanessa McGrath and Nicola Woodgate developed games that can teach creativity and inventiveness to primary pupils.

Dick Ahlstrom

Dick Ahlstrom

Dick Ahlstrom, a contributor to The Irish Times, is the newspaper's former Science Editor.