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News from ICTP 103 - Profile
Master's student Viktoriya Victorovna Semeshenko has travelled widely both with her family and on her own. The one constant in all of her journeys has been her interest in science.
Home and Away
When Viktoriya Victorovna
Semeshenko arrived in Trieste from Uzbekistan in early autumn
2001 to begin the ICTP/SISSA (International School for Advanced
Studies) Joint Master's Degree Programme in Modelling and Simulation
of Complex Realities, it marked her first trip abroad without
her family. But that didn't mean she wasn't well-travelled. Indeed
Semeshenko has been on the move virtually her entire life.
Born in Minsk, the capital city of Belarus, then a republic of
the former Soviet Union, Semeshenko was just one year old when
in 1980 her family moved to Potsdam, then in East Germany, not
far from Berlin.
"My father was in the Soviet Army but he has a degree in
physics from Belarus State University. My mother too has a degree
in physics from the same university and my brother is currently
studying engineering. So science must be in my genes."
Semeshenko attended primary school in Potsdam. But in 1986 her
family moved to Turkmenistan. Five years later they were on the
road again, this time relocating to Tashkent, the capital city
of Uzbekistan, another former Soviet republic. That's where her
family still lives.
"During secondary school," she notes, "I was fond
of biology. I did well on a special exam for students designed
to gauge their aptitude in science. My score gave me an opportunity
to take advanced courses in a wide range of scientific disciplines--biology,
chemistry, mathematics and physics--that were given by professors
from the University of Tashkent."
"At that time I wanted to become a biologist. I thoroughly
enjoyed doing experiments in the school laboratory using microscopes,
test tubes and other equipment."
But once the special courses in science began, Semeshenko's interest
rapidly tilted towards the study of physics. "The physics
courses were taught by a very special teacher, Semyon Efimovich
Brener, who is now in Israel. Under his guidance, I became captivated
by physics. I decided to major in it, instead of biology, in college."
In 1996 Semeshenko entered Tashkent State Technical University
and concentrated her studies in electronics and microelectronics.
She received her bachelor's degree in spring 2000 and entered
the master's programme that fall. "Photovoltaic systems provided
the general framework for my studies. My research, however, focussed
specifically on modelling of particle behaviour using molecular
dynamics method."
"Shortly before completing my master's degree," she
recalls, "I came across an announcement for the ICTP/SISSA
Joint Master's Degree Programme in Modelling and Simulation of
Complex Realities posted on a bulletin board at my university.
I decided to apply without telling my parents. Only after completing
and sending off the form did I let them know of my intentions
to continue my studies in a school thousands of kilometers from
home. Although initially concerned about being so far from family
and friends--after all, my family had travelled widely but never
apart--both my mother and father expressed their encouragement
and support."
Semeshenko arrived in Trieste in October 2001. Last summer, as
part of her training, she participated in a work-study project
to improve the reliability of smoke detectors using neural networks.
Sponsored by the Trieste-based firm Pittway Tecnologica,
her assignment was co-ordinated by Silvio Franz, a staff scientist
in ICTP's condensed matter physics group (see News from ICTP,
Autumn 2002, pp.
6-7). Semeshenko is now preparing her master's thesis on optimal
control of quantum systems. Her advisor is Ugo Boscain, a researcher
at SISSA, the Italian degree-granting institution that is based
next door to ICTP and serves as a co-sponsor of the master's degree
programme.
Since coming to Trieste, Semeshenko has found time to visit many
Italian cities. She likes Florence most of all. This winter she
broadened her travels to include a journey to Paris, which she
found both beautiful and enchanting. She also visited Potsdam,
returning to the house where she had lived with her family as
a child. "It's where I began my education in primary school.
It was interesting to think about how far my educational journey
has taken me and how much farther I will need to go to reach my
ultimate destination."