Prizes & Awards

Credit: Fotolia

HybridLeg sees Polish company take third place at international CYBATHALON comp

Polish company Contur 2000 has taken third place in the CYBATHLON 2020 competition with their HybridLeg entry to the bionic leg prostheses category.

  • Professor Andrzej Udalski. PAP/Paweł Supernak 19.08.2016

    Chilean government awards Professor Andrzej Udalski for achievements in astronomy

    In commemoration of the '500th Discovery of the Strait of Magellan', the Chilean government has awarded Polish astronomer, Professor Andrzej Udalski, a member of the Polish Academy of Sciences and an employee of the Astronomical Observatory of the University of Warsaw.

  • Breath-taking photos taken from space capture planet Earth in all its beauty in online competition

    The image of the area on the border of Canada and Greenland has been selected the most beautiful satellite photo of the Earth taken from space (from the CREODIAS.eu platform) in the competition 'Seize the beauty of our planet'.

  • Photo: press materials

    Hattrick for Polish scientists as three scoop National Science Centre awards

    Dr. Wojciech Fendler from the Medical University of Łódź, Dr. Jakub Growiec from the Warsaw School of Economics and Dr. Michał Tomza from the University of Warsaw are the winners of the 8th edition of the National Science Centre Award.

  • Credit: Adobe Stock

    Roll up, roll up! Popularizer of Science 2020 competition launched

    The 16th edition of the Popularizer of Science has been launched, honouring people, teams and institutions that promote science in Poland.

  • Wrocław, 10.10.2017. Professor Zbigniew Kundzewicz during a conference on the city's candidacy for the title of the European Green Capital 2020, May 10th. (kru) PAP/Maciej Kulczyński

    Professor Zbigniew Kundzewicz wins prestigious award for water research

    Professor Zbigniew Kundzewicz is the first Polish researcher to receive the Prince Sultan Bin Abdulaziz International Prize for Water. The international panel of scientists recognised his research on the relationship between climate and water resources, the Polish Academy of Sciences reports.

  • Photo: Fotolia
    Technology

    Polish IT whizzes beat over 1,200 global teams to take second place in Hack-a-Sat

    Polish IT and security whizzes have taken second place in the finals of the Hack-a-Sat competition.

  • Credit: MarekMiś [CC BY 4.0] via Wikimedia Commons

    Stunning photo of a ‘birthing daphnia’ wins Wiki Science Comp

    An incredible photograph of a birthing daphnia, has won the international Wiki Science Competition in the microscopy images category.

  • Dr Przemysław Mróz (credit: FNP)

    Dr. Przemysław Mróz awarded the Frank Wilczek Award of the Jagiellonian University and the Kościuszko Foundation

    Dr. Przemysław Mróz has been announced the first laureate of the new Frank Wilczek Award. The prize was established to recognize outstanding young researchers who have made a significant contribution to physics, astronomy or closely related areas. The award patron – Professor Frank Wilczek, physicist from the Massachusets Insitute of Technology – is the laureate of the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics . The Award is funded by the Jagiellonian University and the Kościuszko Foundation. Dr. Przemysław Mróz has been awarded for the scientific achievement entitled: Free-floating planets – a new category of exoplanets.

  • Source: WULS-SGGW

    Polish prof. among finalists of EU Prize for Women Innovators

    Professor Magdalena Król from WULS-SGGW, a specialist in experimental oncology, is among 21 finalists of the EU Prize for Women Innovators. The researcher is working on cell-based technology that helps in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer.

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Boulder TM 1219 in a wider landscape perspective. Credit: A. Rozwadowski, source: Cambridge Archaeological Journal.

Polish scientists reinterpret petroglyphs of Toro Muerto

The geometric patterns, lines and zigzags that accompany the images of dancers (danzantes) carved in the rocks of the Peruvian Toro Muerto are not snakes or lightning bolts, but a record of songs - suggest Polish scientists who analyse rock art from 2,000 years ago.