International Physics Olympiad Explained

The International Physics Olympiad (IPhO) is an annual physics competition for high school students. It is one of the International Science Olympiads. The first IPhO was held in Warsaw, Poland in 1967.[1]

Each national delegation is made up of at most five student competitors plus two leaders, selected on a national level. Observers may also accompany a national team. The students compete as individuals, and must sit for intensive theoretical and laboratory examinations. For their efforts the students can be awarded gold, silver, or bronze medals or an honourable mention.[2]

The theoretical examination lasts 5 hours and consists of three questions. Usually these questions involve more than one part. The practical examination may consist of one laboratory examination of five hours, or two, which together take up the full five hours.

History

The idea of creating the International Physics Olympiad was conceived in Eastern Bloc countries, inspired by the 1959 established International Mathematical Olympiad. Poland seemed to offer the best conditions at the time, and so the first IPhO was held in Warsaw in 1967, organized by Czesław Ścisłowski.[3] Some months prior to the competition, all Central European countries were invited, and the five countries Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland and Romania participated. Each country sent a delegation of three students and one supervisor. Already in this first edition, the competition consisted of two exams, one theoretical and one experimental, and the students went on excursions while their exams were marked.

The second IPhO was held in Hungary, with the additional participation of the German Democratic Republic, the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia. Subsequent editions were carried out in the following years in Czechoslovakia, the Soviet Union, Bulgaria and Romania. At that sixth IPhO in 1972, France joined the competition as the first Western country and Cuba as the first non-European country.[4] With growing size and organizational effort (and no participation fee at that time), no country was willing to arrange an IPhO in 1973. To hold up the competition, Poland volunteered to host another IPhO in 1974, but the problem soon reappeared: With the Federal Republic of Germany, Sweden and Finland, additional Western countries had joined the IPhO, and the Eastern Bloc countries decided in 1977 that they would only host every other IPhO. As the Western countries were not yet ready with the necessary long-term preparation effort, no IPhO was held in 1978 and in 1980. The first Western Country to host the IPhO was the Federal Republic of Germany in 1982. Since then, the IPhO has been held regularly every year except 2020 due to the pandemic,[5] and the organization has become a prestigious endeavor that many countries are happy to take.[6]

The number of participating countries has grown steadily over the years. After the initial set of Eastern Bloc countries, many European countries joined since the 1970s, as well as Asian and American countries starting in the 1980s. Between 1990 and 2000 alone, the total number increased from 32 countries to 63. African countries have been joining since the 2000s.[7] After accession into IPhO, every country must notify the others within five years about its willingness to host the IPhO.[8] The venue of the Olympiad is decided for years ahead. With over 80 actively participating countries today, each IPhO is a big event with around 700 attendees and a total budget of several million euros.[9] A small fraction of the cost is covered by a participation fee of around €3500 per team, which was introduced in 1997 on a voluntary basis and made obligatory in 2013.[10]

The formal structure of the IPhO was established in 1968 at a dedicated meeting in Czechoslovakia, soon after the second IPhO.[4] There the statutes and the syllabus[8] were officially accepted by the International Board, which consists of the delegation heads from all participating countries.[11] The team size was finally set to five students in 1971, and in 1976 the number of experimental problems was set to one or two, while there are three theoretical problems in each competition. In 1984, the IPhO established a permanent secretariat and a president's office. This position was held by Waldemar Gorzkowski until the 2007 Olympiad, then Maija Ahtee (2007–2008), Hans Jordens (2008–2018) and Rajdeep Singh Rawat (2018 onwards).[11] Since 1984 the IPhO has collaborated with UNESCO for moral support and publicity. An advisory committee, consisting of 14 experienced people, was introduced in 1996.

Distribution of medals

The minimal scores required for Olympiad medals and honourable mentions are chosen by the organizers according to the following rules: A gold medal should be awarded to the top 8% of the participants. A silver medal or better should be awarded to the top 25%. A bronze medal or better should be awarded to the top 50%. An honourable mention or better should be awarded to the top 67%. All other participants receive certificates of participation. The participant with the highest score (absolute winner) receives a special prize, in addition to a gold medal.

The current ten countries with the best all-time results are as follows as of July 2024:[12]

Country Gold Silver Bronze TotalHonorable mentions Gold in Last 10 Contests (updated till 2024)
151 21 9 1812 55
96 47 10 1534 48
88 28 24 1407 47
80 34 18 1328 35
78 51 29 15811 32
61 89 62 21330 26
51 53 14 1187 23
49 47 27 12325 24
45 68 102 21535 6
44 54 49 14718 29
41 26 22 8912 NA
37 72 39 14812 7
37 50 22 10918 12
31 83 80 19427 3
28 43 46 11724 6
24 52 84 16068 3
21 43 27 913 11
21 40 20 814 11
19 58 60 13713 4
15 46 85 14662 1
15 24 29 6827 NA
14 46 28 9325 6
14 35 53 10225 5
13 53 83 14922 2
13 53 53 14632 3

Summary

Number !Year Host country !Host city Absolute winner !ScoreMedal cutoffs (G/S/B/HM)
1 1967 Poland Sándor Szalay (Hungary) 39/40
2 1968 Hungary Tomasz Kręglewski (Poland)
Mojmír Simerský (Czechoslovakia)
35/40
3 1969 Czechoslovakia Mojmír Šob (Czechoslovakia) 48/48
4 1970 Soviet Union Mikhaïl Volochine (Soviet Union) 57/60
5 1971 Bulgaria Karel Šafařík (Czechoslovakia)
Ádám Tichy-Rács (Hungary)
48.6/60
6 1972 Romania Zoltán Szabó (Hungary) 57/60
1973Not held as no country was willing to organise it.[13]
7 1974 Poland Jarosław Deminet (Poland)
Jerzy Tarasiuk (Poland)
46/50
8 1975 East Germany Sergey Korshunov (Soviet Union) 43/50
9 1976 Hungary Rafał Łubis (Poland) 47.5/50
10 1977 Czechoslovakia Jiří Svoboda (Czechoslovakia) 49/50
1978Not held as no non-socialist country was ready to organise the competition without a prior, necessary long-time preparation effort.
11 1979 Soviet Union Maksim Tsipine (Soviet Union) 43/50
1980Not held as no non-socialist country was ready to organise the competition without a prior, necessary long-time preparation effort.
12 1981 Bulgaria Aleksandr Goutine (Soviet Union) 47/50
13 1982 West Germany Manfred Lehn (West Germany) 43/50
14 1983 Romania Ivan Ivanov (Bulgaria) 43.75/50
15 1984 Sweden Jan de Boer (Netherlands)
Sorin Spânoche (Romania)
43/50
16 1985 Yugoslavia Patrik Španĕl (Czechoslovakia) 42.5/50
17 1986 United Kingdom Oleg Volkov (Soviet Union) 37.9/50
18 1987 East Germany Catalin Malureanu (Romania) 49/50
19 1988 Austria Conrad McDonnell (United Kingdom) 39.38/50
20 1989 Poland Steven Gubser (United States) 46.33/50
21 1990 Netherlands Alexander H. Barnett (United Kingdom) 45.7/50
22 1991 Cuba Timour Tchoutenko (Soviet Union) 48.2/50
23 1992 Finland Chen Han (China) 44/50
24 1993 United States Zhang Junan (China)
Harald Pfeiffer (Germany)
40.65/50
25 1994 China Yang Liang (China) 44.3/50
26 1995 Australia Yu Haitao (China) 95/100
27 1996 Norway Liu Yurun (China) 47.50/50
28 1997 Canada Sayed Mehdi Anvari (Iran) 47.25/50
29 1998 Iceland Chen Yuao (China) 47.50/5042 / 36 / 30 / 23
30 1999 Italy Konstantin Kravtsov (Russia) 49.80/5043 / 37 / 31 / 24
31 2000 United Kingdom Leicester[14] Lu Ying (China) 43.40/5037 / 32 / 27 / 20
32 2001 Turkey Daniyar Nourgaliev (Russia) 47.55/5042 / 36 / 30 / 23
33 2002 Indonesia Ngoc Duong Dang (Vietnam) 45.40/5036 / 32 / 24 / 16
34 2003 Taiwan Pavel Batrachenko (United States) 42.30/5033 / 27 / 22 / 16
35 2004 South Korea Alexander Mikhalychev (Belarus) 47.70/5039 / 34 / 25 / 18
36 2005 Spain Gábor Halász (Hungary)
Lin Ying-hsuan (Taiwan)
49.50/5045 / 41 / 33 / 21
37 2006 Singapore Jonathan Pradana Mailoa (Indonesia) 47.20/5037 / 29 / 21 / 14
38 2007 Iran Choi Youngjoon (South Korea) 48.80/5044 / 38 / 33 / 22
39 2008 Vietnam Tan Longzhi (China) 44.60/5033 / 26 / 21 / 14
40 2009 Mexico Shi Handuo (China) 48.20/5033.35 / 25.10 / 17.45 / 13.05
41 2010 Croatia Yu Yichao (China) 48.65/5038.10 / 30.95 / 22.35 / 16.80
42 2011 Thailand Hsu Tzu-ming (Taiwan) 48.60/5041.10 / 34.50 / 24.62 / 18.00
43 2012 Estonia Attila Szabó (Hungary) 45.80/5031.0 / 23.9 / 17.2 / 12.4
44 2013 Denmark Attila Szabó (Hungary)47.00/5038.6 / 29.5 / 21.5 / 16.7
45 2014 Kazakhstan Xiaoyu Xu (China) 41.20/5027.21 / 18.40 / 12.70 / 9.15
46 2015 India Taehyoung Kim (South Korea)48.30/5042.20 / 30.00 / 24.00 / 18.00
47 2016 Switzerland and Liechtenstein Mao Chenkai (China)[15] 48.10/5039.80 / 30.70 / 22.70 / 17.50
48 2017 Indonesia Uncertain[16] [17] [18]
Haoyang Gao (China), theory
Akihiro Watanabe (Japan), experiment
Not published due to inconsistent marking by organisers, among other reasons.[19] 28.01 / 21.30 / 14.70 / 11.12
49 2018 Portugal Yang Tianhua (China) 46.80/5035.00 / 27.20 / 17.80 / 14.05
50 2019 Israel Xiangkai Sun (China) 43.50/50
2020Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic. A Russia-organized IdPhO 2020 was held instead as an IPhO endorsed event.[20]
51 2021 Lithuania Vilnius (online) Kyungmin Kim (South Korea) 46.25/5033.37 / 23.74 / 14.50 / 9.15
52 2022 Switzerland[21] Held online; Belarus was supposed to be host but cancelled due to involvement in the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[22] Guowei Xu (China)43.20/5023.75 / 16.05 / 11.65 / 7.15
53 2023 Japan Tokyo[23] [24] Bowen Yu (China) 45.20/5035.60 / 25.20 / 17.40 / 13.40
54 2024 Iran Isfahan[25] Zhang Xinrui (China) 46.38/5033.92 / 19.35 / 12.49 / 9.03
55 2025 France Paris TBD TBD
56 2026 Colombia TBD TBD TBD
57 2027 Hungary TBD TBD TBD
58 2028 South Korea TBD TBD TBD
59 2029 Ecuador TBD TBD TBD
60 2030 Russia TBD TBD TBD

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: IPhO - The International Physics Olympiad, Singapore . 2022-07-03 . www.ipho-new.org . en-GB.
  2. Web site: iPhO - Statutes of the International Physics Olympiads and Syllabus . 2022-07-03 . en-GB.
  3. Web site: IPhO history By Waldemar Gorzkowski.
  4. Web site: IPhO Documentations, History of IPhO.
  5. Web site: IPho - Documentations. 2021-10-15. en-GB.
  6. Web site: International Physics Olympiad (IPhO) 2021. 2021-10-15. www.ipho2021.lt.
  7. https://www.ipho-new.org/download/580/ Participation statistics in the International Physics Olympiads, prepared by the IPhO Secretariat
  8. Web site: Statutes of the International Physics Olympiads.
  9. Web site: Final report of the 47th International Physics Olympiad in Switzerland and Liechtenstein 2016.
  10. https://www.ipho-new.org/download/422/ Minutes of the Meetings of the International Board during the IPhO 2013
  11. Web site: Secretariat, Advisory Committee & International Board.
  12. Web site: List of Countries. 2023-07-29.
  13. Web site: www.ipho-new.org official.
  14. Web site: IPhO 2000 Results – Gold Medal Holders . https://web.archive.org/web/20000920072514/http://www.star.le.ac.uk/IPhO-2000/results_gold.html . 20 September 2000 . . 12 March 2015.
  15. Web site: Official final ranking.
  16. Web site: Minutes of the Meetings of the International Board during the IPhO 2017.
  17. Web site: Indonesian students win gold, silver medals in International Physics Olympiad.
  18. Web site: Indonesia Wins Two Gold, Three Silver Medals at International Physics Olympiad.
  19. Web site: 30 November 2022 . Minute of the International Board 2017 . IPhO Documentations.
  20. Web site: Home . i20.mipt.ru.
  21. Web site: IPhO 2022 Website . 2022-07-27 . ipho2022.com.
  22. Web site: IPhO Belarus.
  23. ryugo hayano . hayano . 680302264318201857 . 25 December 2015 . (IPhO準備会議終了.国際物理オリンピックは2022年に東京で開催.出題委員長を拝命) . ja . 3 October 2021.
  24. Web site: IPhO 2023 homepage.
  25. Web site: IPhO 2024 . 2024-05-10 . www.ipho2024.ir.