Walter Boas Medal
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (January 2020) |
The Walter Boas Medal is awarded by the Australian Institute of Physics for research in Physics in Australia. It is named in memory of is named in memory of Walter Boas (1904-1982) — an eminent scientist and metallurgist who worked on the physics of metals.[1]
Recipients[]
Source: Australian Institute of Physics
- 1984 James A. Piper, Macquarie University (inaugural winner)
- 1985 Peter Hannaford, CSIRO Division of Materials Technology
- 1986 Donald Melrose, Sydney University
- 1987 Anthony William Thomas, University of Adelaide
- 1988 Robert Delbourgo, University of Tasmania
- 1989 Jim Williams, University of Western Australia
- 1990 , University of Melbourne
- 1990 Tony Klein, University of Melbourne
- 1991 , CSIRO Division of Applied Physics
- 1992 Bruce Harold John McKellar, University of Melbourne
- 1993 Jim Williams, Australian National University
- 1994 No medal awarded
- 1995 David Blair, University of Western Australia
- 1996 , Murdoch University
- 1996 , Flinders University
- 1997 Keith Nugent, University of Melbourne
- 1997 Stephen W. Wilkins, CSIRO
- 1998 Robert Clark, University of NSW
- 1999 No medal awarded
- 2000 Hans A. Bachor, Australian National University
- 2001 Tony Williams, University of Adelaide
- 2002 Peter Robinson, University of Sydney
- 2003 Gerard J. Milburn, University of Queensland
- 2004 , Australian National University
- 2005 Yuri Kivshar, Australian National University
- 2006 , The University of Western Australia
- 2007 , University of Adelaide
- 2008 Peter Drummond, Swinburne University of Technology
- 2009 , University of New South Wales
- 2010 Kostya Ostrikov, CSIRO
- 2011 Ben Eggleton, University of Sydney
- 2012 , University of Melbourne
- 2013 Chennupati Jagadish, Australian National University
- 2014 , University of Melbourne
- 2015 Min Gu, Swinburne University of Technology
- 2016 Geraint F. Lewis, University of Sydney
- 2017 David McClelland, Australian National University[2]
- 2018 , University of Melbourne
- 2019 Andrea Morello, University of NSW
- 2020 Joss Bland-Hawthorn, University of Sydney
- 2021 Howard Wiseman, Griffith University
See also[]
- List of physics awards
- List of prizes named after people
References[]
- ^ "Walter Boas Medal". Australian Institute of Physics.
- ^ "Physics in the Limelight, Let's Keep it There". Australian Institute of Physics. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
Categories:
- Australian science and technology awards
- Physics awards
- Awards established in 1984