Hugo Currie
| Hugo Currie | |
|---|---|
| Hugo Currie in media reportNo File Currently Available Hugo Currie in media report | |
| Born | c. 2003 |
| 🏳️ Nationality | Australian |
| 🏫 Education | The Riverina Anglican College |
| 💼 Occupation |
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| 📆 Years active | 2019 – present |
Hugo Currie is a high school student, theoretical physicist and golfer based in Wagga Wagga, Australia.
Early Life
Hugo began his early education at Lutheran Primary School in Wagga Wagga, Australia. From a very young age he showed a keen interest in computing, often providing support to other students and teaching staff.
Scientific Works
Inspired as a result of an International Baccalaureate Mathematics assignment on the golden ratio[1], and after tinkering around at home with his own experimental data, Hugo discovered a strong correlation between the golden ratio and the chart of nuclides, and used that data to predict the existence of several new nuclides, and potentially new elements.[1]
His work report titled "An Investigation of the Application of the Golden Ratio and Fibonacci Sequence Associated with the Chart of Nuclides"[2] was published in Open Science Journal's Volume 5, No 2 (2020) Collection. Hugo's Year 11 maths teacher, Mrs Andrea Barkla said that "I have been teaching for over 20 years now and I've never had a student discover anything quite like this".[3]
Golfing Career
Hugo is universally accepted as a “mad lad”, and demonstrates his golf skills on a weekly basis, including building automated machines connecting golf drivers to motors - reaching immense speed and distance.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 McLaughlin, Jessica (2020-06-03). "Teen's mathematical discovery lands him in peer reviewed journal". Bunbury Mail. Retrieved 2020-09-03.
- ↑ Currie, Hugo Ryan; Currie, Geoffrey Michael (2020-05-28). "An Investigation of the Application of the Golden Ratio and Fibonacci Sequence Associated with the Chart of Nuclides". Open Science Journal. 5 (2). doi:10.23954/osj.v%vi%i.2496. ISSN 2466-4308.
- ↑ McLaughlin, Jessica (2020-06-03). "Teen's mathematical discovery lands him in peer reviewed journal". The Leader. Retrieved 2020-09-03.
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