List of Clarivate Citation laureates in Physics
Appearance
The following is a list of Clarivate Citation Laureates in Physics, considered likely candidates to win the Nobel Prize in Physics.[1]
Laureates[edit]
Citation Laureates | Nationality | Motivations | Institute | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2008[2] | ||||
2010 |
Andre Geim (born 1958) |
"for their discovery and analysis of graphene." | University of Manchester | |
2010 |
Konstantin Novoselov (born 1974) |
|||
Vera Rubin (1928–2016) |
"for her pioneering research indicating the existence of dark matter in the universe." | Carnegie Institution of Washington | ||
2020 |
Roger Penrose (born 1931) |
"for their related discoveries of, Penrose-tilings and quasicrystals, respectively." | University of Oxford | |
2011 |
Dan Shechtman (born 1941) |
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2009[3] | ||||
Yakir Aharonov (born 1932) |
"for their discovery of the Aharonov–Bohm effect and the related Berry phase, respectively." | |||
Michael Berry (born 1941) |
University of Bristol | |||
Juan Ignacio Cirac Sasturain (born 1965) |
"for their pioneering research on quantum optics and quantum computing." | Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics | ||
Peter Zoller (born 1952) |
||||
John Pendry (born 1943) |
"for their prediction and discovery of negative refraction." | Imperial College London | ||
Sheldon Schultz (1933–2017) |
University of California, San Diego | |||
David R. Smith (born 1964) |
Duke University | |||
2010[4] | ||||
Charles L. Bennett (born 1956) |
"for discoveries deriving from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), including the age of the universe, its topography, and its composition." | |||
Lyman Page (born 1957) |
Princeton University | |||
David Spergel (born 1961) |
||||
Thomas Ebbesen (born 1954) |
"for observation and explanation of the transmission of light through subwavelength holes, which ignited the field of surface plasmon photonics." |
| ||
2011 |
Saul Perlmutter (born 1959) |
"for discoveries of the accelerating rate of the expansion of the universe, and its implications for the existence of dark energy." | ||
2011 |
Adam Riess (born 1969) |
|||
2011 |
Brian Schmidt (born 1967) |
Australian National University | ||
2011[5] | ||||
2022 |
Alain Aspect (born 1947) |
"for their tests of Bell inequalities and research on quantum entanglement." | ||
2022 |
John Clauser (born 1942) |
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory | ||
2022 |
Anton Zeilinger (born 1945) |
|||
Sajeev John (born 1957) |
"for their invention and development of photonic band gap materials." | University of Toronto | ||
Eli Yablonovitch (born 1946) |
University of California, Berkeley | |||
Hideo Ohno (born 1954) |
"for contributions to ferromagnetism in diluted magnetic semiconductors." | |||
2012[6] | ||||
Charles H. Bennett (born 1943) |
"for their pioneering description of a protocol for quantum teleportation, which has since been experimentally verified." | IBM Research | ||
Gilles Brassard (born 1955) |
University of Montreal | |||
William Wootters (born 1951) |
Williams College | |||
Leigh Canham (born 1958) |
"for discovery of photoluminescence in porous silicon." | University of Birmingham | ||
Stephen E. Harris (born 1936) |
"for the experimental demonstration of electromagnetically induced transparency (Harris) and of 'slow light' (Harris and Hau)." | Stanford University | ||
Lene Hau (born 1959) |
Harvard University | |||
2013[7] | ||||
2013 |
François Englert (born 1932) |
"for their prediction of the Brout-Englert-Higgs boson." | ||
2013 |
Peter W. Higgs (born 1929) |
University of Edinburgh | ||
Hideo Hosono (born 1953) |
"for his discovery of iron-based superconductors." | Tokyo Institute of Technology | ||
Geoffrey Marcy (born 1954) |
"for their discoveries of extrasolar planets." | University of California, Berkeley | ||
2019 |
Michel Mayor (born 1942) |
University of Geneva | ||
2019 |
Didier P. Queloz (born 1966) |
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2014[8] | ||||
Charles L. Kane (born 1963) |
"for theoretical and experimental research on the quantum spin Hall effect and topological insulators." | University of Pennsylvania | ||
Laurens W. Molenkamp (born 1956) |
University of Würzburg | |||
Shoucheng Zhang (1963–2018) |
Stanford University | |||
James F. Scott (1942–2020) |
"for their pioneering research on ferroelectric memory devices (Scott) and new multiferroic materials (Ramesh and Tokura)." | University of Cambridge | ||
Ramamoorthy Ramesh (born 1960) |
University of California, Berkeley | |||
Yoshinori Tokura[a] (born 1954) |
University of Tokyo | |||
Peidong Yang (born 1971) |
"for his contributions to nanowire photonics including the creation of first nanowire nanolaser." | |||
2015[9] | ||||
Paul Corkum (born 1943) |
"for contributions to the development of attosecond physics." | University of Ottawa | ||
2023 |
Ferenc Krausz (born 1962) |
|||
Deborah S. Jin (1968–2016) |
"for pioneering research on atomic gases at ultra-cold temperatures and the creation of the first fermionic condensate." | University of Colorado | ||
Zhong Lin Wang (born 1961) |
"for his invention of piezotronic and piezophototronic nanogenerators." | Georgia Institute of Technology | ||
2016[10] | ||||
Marvin L. Cohen (born 1935) |
"for theoretical studies of solid materials, prediction of their properties, and especially for the empirical pseudopotential method." | |||
Ronald Drever (1931–2017) |
"for the development of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) that made possible the detection of gravitational waves." | California Institute of Technology | ||
2017 |
Kip Thorne (born 1940) |
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2017 |
Rainer Weiss (born 1932) |
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Celso Grebogi (born 1947) |
"for their description of a control theory of chaotic systems, the OGY method." | University of Aberdeen | ||
Edward Ott (born 1941) |
University of Maryland | |||
James A. Yorke (born 1941) |
||||
2017[11] | ||||
Phaedon Avouris (born 1945) |
"for seminal contributions to carbon-based electronics." | Thomas J. Watson Research Center | ||
Cornelis Dekker (born 1949) |
Delft University of Technology | |||
Paul McEuen (born 1963) |
Cornell University | |||
Mitchell Feigenbaum (1944–2019) |
"for pioneering discoveries in nonlinear and chaotic physical systems and for identification of the Feigenbaum constants." | Rockefeller University | ||
Rashid Sunyaev (born 1943) |
"for his profound contributions to our understanding of the universe, including its origins, galactic formation processes, disk accretion of black holes, and many other cosmological phenomena." | |||
2018[12] | ||||
David Awschalom (born 1956) |
"for observation of the spin Hall effect in semiconductors." | University of Chicago | ||
Arthur Gossard (1935–2022) |
University of California, Santa Barbara | |||
Sandra Faber (born 1944) |
"for pioneering methods to determine the age, size and distance of galaxies and for other contributions to cosmology." | University of California, Santa Cruz | ||
Yury Gogotsi (born 1961) |
"for discoveries advancing the understanding and development of carbon-based materials, including for capacitive energy storage and understanding the mechanisms of operation of supercapacitors." | Drexel Nanomaterials Institute | ||
Rodney S. Ruoff (born 1957) |
Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology | |||
Patrice Simon (born 1969) |
Université Paul Sabatier | |||
2019[13] | ||||
Artur Ekert (born 1961) |
"for contributions to quantum computation and quantum cryptography." | |||
Tony Heinz (born 1956) |
"for pioneering research on optical and electronic properties of two-dimensional nanomaterials." | |||
John Perdew (born 1943) |
"for advances in density functional theory of electronic structure, revealing 'nature's glue'." | Temple University | ||
2020[14] | ||||
Thomas L. Carroll |
"for research in nonlinear dynamics including synchronization of chaotic systems." | United States Naval Research Laboratory | ||
Louis M. Pecora (born 1947) |
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Hongjie Dai (born 1966) |
"for fabrication and novel applications of carbon and boron nitride nanotubes." | Stanford University | ||
Alex Zettl (born 1956) |
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Carlos Frenk (born 1951) |
"for their fundamental studies of galaxy formation and evolution, cosmic structure, and dark matter halos." | Durham University | ||
Julio Navarro (born 1962) |
University of Victoria | |||
Simon White (born 1951) |
Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics | |||
2021[15] | ||||
Alexei Kitaev (born 1963) |
"for topological quantum computation, in which quantum information is encoded and protected using topological properties of many-body systems." | California Institute of Technology | ||
Mark Newman |
"for wide-ranging research on network systems including work on community structure and random graph models." | University of Michigan | ||
2021 |
Giorgio Parisi (born 1948) |
"for ground-breaking discoveries in quantum chromodynamics and in the study of complex disordered systems." | Sapienza University of Rome | |
2022[16] | ||||
Immanuel Bloch (born 1972) |
"for ground-breaking research on quantum many-body systems using ultra-cold atomic and molecular gases, opening the way to quantum simulations of 'artificial solids'." | |||
Stephen Quake (born 1969) |
"for contributions to the physics of fluid phenomena on the nanoliter scale." | |||
Takashi Taniguchi (born 1959) |
"for fabrication of high-quality hexagonal boron nitride crystals, the availability of which enabled a revolution in research on the electronic behavior of two-dimensional materials." | National Institute for Materials Science | ||
Kenji Watanabe (born 1969) |
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2023[17] | ||||
Sharon C. Glotzer | "for demonstrating the role of entropy in the self-assembly of matter and for introducing strategies to control the assembly process to engineer new materials." | University of Michigan, Ann Arbor | ||
Federico Capasso (born 1949) |
"for pioneering research on photonics, plasmonics, and metasurfaces, as well as contributions to the invention of and improvements on the quantum cascade laser." | Harvard University, Cambridge | ||
Stuart S. P. Parkin (born 1955) |
"for research on spintronics and specifically the development of racetrack memory for increased data storage density." | Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg |
Notes[edit]
- ^ Tokura was previously named a Citation Laureate in 2002.
References[edit]
- ^ "Acquisition of the Thomson Reuters Intellectual Property and Science Business by Onex and Baring Asia Completed". PR Newswire. October 3, 2016.
- ^ "The Scientific Business of Thomson Reuters Predicts Nobel Laureates". PR Newswire. 3 October 2008.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts Nobel Laureates". PR Newswire. 24 September 2009.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts Nobel Laureates". PR Newswire. 21 September 2010.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts Nobel Laureates". ACN Newswire. 21 September 2011.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts 2012 Nobel Laureates". PR Newswire. 19 September 2012.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts 2013 Nobel Laureates". PR Newswire. 25 September 2013.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts 2014 Nobel Laureates, Researchers Forecast for Nobel Recognition". PR Newswire. 25 September 2014.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Forecasts Nobel Prize Winners". PR Newswire. 24 September 2015.
- ^ "Web of Science Predicts 2016 Nobel Prize Winners". PR Newswire. 21 September 2016.
- ^ "The 2017 Clarivate Citation Laureates". Clarivate Analytics. 20 September 2017. Archived from the original on 20 September 2017.
- ^ "The 2018 Clarivate Citation Laureates" (PDF). Clarivate Analytics. 20 September 2018.
- ^ "The 2019 Clarivate Citation Laureates" (PDF). Clarivate Analytics. 24 September 2019.
- ^ "Clarivate Reveals 2020 Citation Laureates - Annual List of Researchers of Nobel Class". PR Newswire. 23 September 2020.
- ^ "Clarivate Unveils Citation Laureates 2021 - Annual List of Researchers of Nobel Class". PR Newswire. 22 September 2021.
- ^ "Clarivate Reveals Citation Laureates 2022 - Annual List of Researchers of Nobel Class". PR Newswire. 21 September 2022.
- ^ "The 2023 Clarivate Citation Laureates"