Herbert P. Broida Prize
The Herbert P. Broida Prize is awarded every two years by the American Physical Society for outstanding work for experimental advances in the field of atomic and molecular spectroscopy or chemical physics. The prize was established in 1979 and is named after the physicist Herbert P. Broida. The winner receives $5000 and travel expenses to the award ceremony.[1]
Winners
- 1980: Robert W. Field
- 1981: William Carl Lineberger
- 1983: Theodor W. Hänsch
- 1985: Richard Bersohn
- 1987: Steven Chu
- 1989: Stephen Leone
- 1991: David E. Pritchard
- 1993: Curt Wittig
- 1995: Ahmed Zewail[2]
- 1997: William Happer
- 1999: Terry A. Miller
- 2001: David W. Chandler, Paul Houston
- 2003: George W. Flynn
- 2005: Hanna Reisler
- 2007: James C. Bergquist
- 2009: Gustav Gerber
- 2011: Warren S. Warren
- 2013: Daniel M. Neumark
- 2015: Michael Ashfold
- 2017: Tilman Pfau[3]
Source:[1]
gollark: Those do, as far as I know, have some kind of specification.
gollark: I don't mean C, I mean in Java and python and stuff.
gollark: For a very broad definition of language specification, maybe.
gollark: The ESwhatever specs specify a few builtin features like Math and whatnot.
gollark: It has a standard library. It's just really bad.
See also
References
- "Herbert P. Broida Prize". American Physical Society. 3 October 2018. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
- "Ahmed H. Zewail". NobelPrize.org. 1999. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
- "Herbert P. Broida Prize awarded to Co-Director Tilman Pfau". IQST. 6 October 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
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