I. I. Rabi Award
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (January 2020) |
The I. I. Rabi Award, founded in 1983, is awarded annually by IEEE.
- "The Rabi Award is to recognize outstanding contributions related to the fields of atomic and molecular frequency standards, and time transfer and dissemination."[1]
The award is named after Isidor Isaac Rabi, Nobel Prize winner in 1944. He was the first recipient of the award, for his experimental and theoretical work on .[1]
Recipients[]
- 1983 - I. I. Rabi
- 1984 - David W. Allan
- 1985 - Norman Ramsey, Nobel Prize in 1989
- 1986 - Jerrold R. Zacharias
- 1987 - Louis Essen
- 1988 - Gernot M. R. Winkler
- 1989 - Leonard S. Cutler
- 1990 - Claude Audoin
- 1991 - Andrea De Marchi
- 1992 - James A. Barnes
- 1993 - Robert F. C. Vessot
- 1994 - Jacques Vanier
- 1995 - Fred L. Walls
- 1996 - Andre Clairon and Robert E. Drullinger
- 1997 - Harry E. Peters and Nikolai A. Demidov
- 1998 - David J. Wineland, Nobel Prize in 2012
- 1999 - Bernard Guinot
- 2000 - William J. Riley Jr.
- 2001 - Lute Maleki
- 2002 - Jon H. Shirley
- 2003 - Andreas Bauch
- 2005 - Theodor W. Hänsch, Nobel Prize in 2005
- 2004 - John L. Hall, Nobel Prize in 2005
- 2006 - James C. Bergquist
- 2007 - Patrick Gill and Leo Hollberg
- 2008 - Hidetoshi Katori
- 2009 - John D. Prestage
- 2010 - Long Sheng Ma
- 2011 - Fritz Riehle
- 2012 - James Camparo
- 2013 - Judah Levine
- 2014 - Harald R. Telle
- 2015 - [de]
- 2016 - John Kitching
- 2017 - Scott Diddams
- 2018 - Jun Ye
- 2019 - Steven Jefferts
- 2020 - Robert Lutwak
- 2021 - Ekkehard Peik
See also[]
References[]
- ^ a b Rabi Award. IEEE Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control Society. Accessed May 2018.
Categories:
- Physics awards
- Awards established in 1983
- Atomic physics
- Atomic, molecular, and optical physics