Valerii Vinokour

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Valerii Vinokur
Born (1949-04-26) April 26, 1949 (age 72)
Citizenship United States
Alma materInstitute of Solid State Physics (Russia)
Scientific career
FieldsCondensed matter physics
Institutions
Websitewww.anl.gov/profile/valerii-vinokour

Valerii Vinokur (also spelled as Vinokour, or Valery Vinokour, born 26 April 1949) is a condensed matter physicist who works on superconductivity, the physics of vortices, disordered media and glasses, nonequilibrium physics of dissipative systems, quantum phase transitions, quantum thermodynamics, and topological quantum matter.[1][2][3][4][5][6] He is a Senior Scientist and Argonne Distinguished Fellow at Argonne National Laboratory and a Senior Scientist at the Consortium for Advanced Science and Engineering, Office of Research and National Laboratories, The University of Chicago.[7] He is a Foreign Member of the National Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters and a Fellow of the American Physical Society.

Career[]

Vinokur earned his BSc in Physics of Metals at Moscow Institute of Steel and Alloys in 1972 and moved to the Institute of Solid State Physics, Chernogolovka, Russia, where he received a Ph.D. in physics in 1979. He has held appointments as Visiting Scientist at CNRS, Grenoble (1987), Visiting Scientist at Leiden University (1989), Visiting Scientist at ETH (Zurich) (1990), and as Visiting Director of Research at Ecole Normale Superieure (Paris) (1996). Since 1990 Vinokur has worked at the Argonne National Laboratory, having become Distinguished Argonne Fellow in 2009.[7] Since 2018, he has been a Senior Scientist at the Consortium for Advanced Science and Engineering, Office of Research and National Laboratories, The University of Chicago.

Honors, awards and fellowships[]

  • Fellow of the American Physical Society, 1998[8]
  • University of Chicago Distinguished Performance Award, 1998
  • International John Bardeen Prize, 2003[9]
  • Alexander von Humboldt Research Award, 2003
  • Foreign Member of the Norwegian National Academy of Letters and Science, 2013
  • Alexander von Humboldt Research Award, 2013
  • International Abrikosov Prize, 2017[10]
  • Fritz London Memorial Prize, 2020[11] [12]

References[]

  1. ^ "Superinsulators to become scientists' quark playgrounds | Argonne National Laboratory". www.anl.gov.
  2. ^ "Researchers reverse the flow of time on IBM's quantum computer | Argonne National Laboratory". www.anl.gov.
  3. ^ McRae, Mike. "Physicists Have Reversed Time on The Smallest Scale Using a Quantum Computer". ScienceAlert.
  4. ^ Overbye, Dennis. "For a Split Second, a Quantum Computer Made History Go Backward". The New York Times, May 8, 2019.
  5. ^ Mitchem, Savannah. "Novel insight reveals topological tangle in unexpected corner of the universe". Phys.Org, May 26, 2020.
  6. ^ Posunko, Nicolas. "Thermal chaos returns quantum system to its unknown past". Phys.Org, August 6, 2020.
  7. ^ a b "Vinokur's profile at ANL".
  8. ^ "List of American Physical Society Fellows 1998" (PDF). Spring 1999 – via APS Honors and Awards, p.4.
  9. ^ "John Bardeen Prize laureate".
  10. ^ "The Abrikosov Prize 2017".
  11. ^ "Argonnes announcement of 2020 Fritz Prize".
  12. ^ https://phy.duke.edu/sites/phy.duke.edu/files/site-images/VinokurCitationAndBio.pdf
Retrieved from ""