58th Annual STS (19981999)
Finalists
Natalia Toro
Natalia Toro, 14, of Boulder,
studied neutrino oscillations for her Intel Science Talent Search physics
project—work that may help explain mysterious shortages in
neutrino counts and have a fundamental impact on high-energy
physics. Neutrinos are the most elusive of subatomic particles,
rarely interacting with matter. Recent studies published by
researchers in Japan suggest that neutrinos change their
"flavor"—or oscillate—from a flavor that a neutrino
detector can see to one that it cannot, and vice
versa. Natalia used equations she derived using the time-dependent
Schroedinger equation to predict theoretical neutrino counts.
Comparing these with the actual data from Japan, she concluded that
her results strongly favor the neutrino oscillation hypothesis. A
senior at Fairview High School, Natalia took her first
college-level mathematics course in the sixth grade and is the
youngest of this year's finalists. A member of the 1998 United
States Physics Team, she enjoys tennis and swimming and tutoring
middle school students. The daughter of Dr. Gabriel and Beatriz
Toro, Natalia is fluent in Spanish. She hopes to attend MIT to earn
a doctorate in physics.
Back to List of 1999 Intel Science Talent Search Finalists