Bourke Award
The Bourke Award of the Royal Society of Chemistry is an annual prize open to academics from outside the UK. Originally established by the Faraday Society and known as the Bourke Lectures, the award of £2000 enables experts in physical chemistry or chemical physics to present their work in the UK. The winner also receives a commemorative medal.[1]
Winners
Source:[2]
Year | Recipient |
---|---|
2019 | David Beratan[3] |
2018 | Daniel M. Neumark |
2017 | Kieron Burke[4] |
2016 | Laura Gagliardi |
2015 | Lyndon Emsley |
2014 | Ann McDermott |
2013 | Bert Weckhuysen |
2012 | Gregory D. Scholes |
2011 | Mark Ratner |
2010 | Michael T. Bowers |
2009 | Gerard J. M. Meijer |
2008-09 | Thomas R. Rizzo |
2008 | Ole G. Mouritsen |
2007 | George C. Schatz |
2006 | Christian Amatore |
2005 | Marsha I. Lester |
2004 | Paul D. Lett |
2003 | David A. Andelman |
2002 | David J. Nesbitt |
2001 | Ewine van Dishoeck |
2000 | Curt Wittig |
1999 | Daan Frenkel |
1998 | Terry A. Miller |
1997 | Rutger van Santen |
1996 | Kenneth C. Showalter |
1995 | Stephen Leone |
1994 | Dieter M. Kolb |
1993 | Henk Lekkerkerker |
1992 | Richard J. Saykally |
1991 | Gerhard Ertl |
1990 | Keiji Morokuma |
1989 | Donald H. Levy |
1988 | Alexander Pines |
1987 | Martin Quack |
1986 | Lucien Monnerie |
1985 | David Chandler |
1984 | Vladimir Ponec |
1983 | Eizi Hirota |
1982 | E. C. M. Clementi |
1981 | Robin M. Hochstrasser |
1980 | Adriano Zecchina |
1979 | Ora Kedem |
1978 | Antoni Dymanus |
1977 | Roy Gerald Gordon |
1976 | Pierre-Gilles de Gennes |
1975 | P Pimental [sic] |
1974 | Joshua Jortner |
1973 | Bogdan Baranowski |
1972 | Ilya Prigogine |
1971 | H Wolf |
1970 | E. Ulrich Franck |
1968/69 | William Klemperer |
1967 | Dudley R. Herschbach |
G. Wilse Robinson | |
1966 | S Sadron [sic], Harden M. McConnell |
1965 | Heinz Gerischer |
1964 | Stuart A. Rice |
1963 | Alfonso Maria Liquori, Victor Talrose |
1962 | Manfred Eigen |
Joan van der Waals | |
1961 | Harold S. Johnston |
1960 | Harold J. Bernstein |
A Perterlin [sic] | |
1959 | Robert Gomer |
V. V. Voevodsky | |
1958 | Walter H. Stockmauer |
Robert Harold Stokes | |
1957 | Arend Joan Rutgers |
Wilhelm Jost | |
1956 | Jan J. Hermans |
1955 | Donald Hornig |
gollark: So *everyone* gets exactly 2 spells a day shared?
gollark: From what? They have no context except a bunch of code they also can't read.
gollark: Most useful access to it requires an account. Nobody knows how to make one, especially as the authentication mechanisms it relied on are all down, but fortunately a "try APL" REPL with more permissions than it probably should have still functions and allows anonymous access.
gollark: Well, in my headcanon, the system was never designed to be "magic" but is a relic from a more advanced civilisation which can self-repair a decent amount.
gollark: Oh wait, you can, have the system also have a bunch of robotic lifeforms tied into it but make them weird lifeishly and call them "elementals".
See also
References
- "RSC Bourke Award". The Royal Society of Chemistry. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
- "RSC Bourke Award Previous Winners". The Royal Society of Chemistry. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
- "Bourke Award 2019". Retrieved 10 July 2019.
- "Kieron Burke wins 2017 Bourke Award from Britain's Royal Society of Chemistry". UCI News. 10 May 2017. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
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