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Encyclopedia > Fermi Prize

The Enrico Fermi Award is a U.S. government "Presidential" award honoring scientists of international stature for their lifetime achievement in the development, use, or production of energy. It is administered by the U.S. government's Department of Energy. The recipient receives $375,000, a certificate signed by the President and the Secretary of Energy, and a gold medal featuring the likeness of Enrico Fermi. The United States Department of Energy (DOE) is a Cabinet-level department of the United States government responsible for energy policy and nuclear safety. ... Enrico Fermi in the 1940s. ...


Previous winners

John N. Bahcall (December 30, 1934 – August 17, 2005) was an American astrophysicist. ... Sheldon Datz was born July 21, 1927 in New York City, son of Clara and Jacob Datz. ... Herbert F. York is an accomplished American physicist who has held numerous administrative positions (including the first directorship of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Chief Scientist of the Advanced Research Projects Agency), as well as numerous acacademic positions. ... Physicist, who in 1957 established that neutrinos have negative helicity. ... Ugo Fano, 1912 - 2001 Ugo Fano, a leader in theoretical physics in the 20th century was born in Torino, Italy, in 1912 and passed away on February 13, 2001 in Chicago, Illinois, at the age of 88. ... Freeman Dyson at Harvard University in 2004 Freeman John Dyson (born December 15, 1923) is an English-born American physicist and mathematician. ... Harold Brown is the name of several notable people: Harold P. Brown, inventor of the electric chair, a form of capital punishment used in the United States as a predecessor of the fatal injection. ... Leon Max Lederman (born July 15, 1922) is an American experimental physicist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1988 for his work on neutrinos. ... Portrait of Evans Rear Admiral Robley Dunglison Evans (18 August 1846 - 3 January 1912), commanded the U.S. Navys Great White Fleet on its world-wide cruise of 1907-1908. ... External links National Academy of Sciences biography Categories: People stubs | 1908 births | 2002 deaths | Manhattan Project | Physicists ... Luis Walter Alvarez (June 13, 1911 – September 1, 1988) of San Francisco, California, USA, was a famed physicist who worked at the University of California, Berkeley. ... Robert Rathbun Wilson (March 4, 1914–January 16, 2000) was an American physicist who was the youngest group leader of the Manhattan Project, a sculptor, and an architect of Fermi National Laboratory (Fermilab), where he was also the director from 1967-1978. ... Seth Neddermeyer was a physicist who worked in the Manhattan project. ... Sir Rudolf Ernst Peierls, (June 5, 1907, Berlin – September 19, 1995, Oxford), was a German-Born British physicist. ... Wolfgang K.H. Panofsky, a German-American physicist, was born the son of art historian, Erwin Panofsky. ... John Archibald Wheeler (born 1911) is an American theoretical physicist. ... Otto Hahn (March 8, 1879 – July 28, 1968) was a German chemist. ... Lise Meitner ca. ... ... Edward Teller in 1958 as Director of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. ... Hans Albrecht Bethe (born July 2, 1906), is a German-American physicist from Strassburg (then part of Germany, now Strasbourg, France). ... Glenn T. Seaborg Glenn Theodore Seaborg (April 19, 1912 – February 25, 1999) was an American chemist, who was prominent in the discovery and isolation of many transuranic elements (including plutonium, during the Manhattan Project), for which he won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1951. ... Eugene Wigner (left) and Alvin Weinberg Eugene Paul Wigner (Hungarian Wigner Pál JenÅ‘) (November 17, 1902 – January 1, 1995) was a Hungarian physicist and mathematician. ... Ernest Orlando Lawrence (August 8, 1901 - August 27, 1958) was an American physicist and Nobel laureate best known for his invention of the cyclotron. ... John von Neumann in the 1940s. ...

See also

A list of famous prizes, medals, and awards including cups, trophies, bowls, badges, state decorations etc. ... This is a list of prizes that are named after people. ... The Vannevar Bush Award has been given each year since 1980 by National Science Foundation to persons who contributed most toward the welfare of mankind and the nation. The award is named after the American scientist Vannevar Bush (1890-1974). ...

External link

  • DOE website on the Fermi award

  Results from FactBites:
 
Enrico Fermi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1495 words)
Enrico Fermi was born in Rome, Italy in 1901.
Fermi became unhappy, though, with what he saw as an excessively formal theoretical style under the influence of Max Born, and so after six months left for the University of Leiden, Netherlands, to work with Paul Ehrenfest.
In 1938, Fermi won the Nobel Prize in Physics for his "demonstrations of the existence of new radioactive elements produced by neutron irradiation, and for his related discovery of nuclear reactions brought about by slow neutrons".
MSN Encarta - Enrico Fermi (1116 words)
Fermi studied with German physicist Max Born in Göttingen, Germany, from 1922 to 1924.
Fermi became a professor at Columbia University in New York in 1939, and in 1941 moved to Chicago, Illinois, for a professorship at the University of Chicago.
The method that Fermi developed became known as Fermi statistics, and the particles that obey the Pauli exclusion principle became known as fermions.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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