IEEE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Award

The IEEE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Award is a Technical Field Award that was established by the IEEE Board of Directors in 2008. This award may be presented for outstanding contributions to the field of nuclear and plasma sciences and engineering.

IEEE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Award
Awarded forOutstanding contributions to the field of nuclear and plasma sciences and engineering
Presented byInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
First awarded2008
WebsiteIEEE Marie Sklodowska-Curie Award

This award may be presented to an individual, individuals on a team, or up to three multiple recipients.

Recipients of this award receive a bronze medal, certificate, and honorarium.

This award was presented for the first time in 2011. The recipients include the following:

  • 2023: Janet L. Barth, for "leadership of and contributions to the advancement of the design, building, deployment, and operation of capable, robust space systems."
  • 2021: Michel Defrise
  • 2020: Michael A. Lieberman
  • 2019: Sanjiv "Sam" Gambhir
  • 2018: David R. Nygren, an American particle physicist, for "pioneering radiation detector developments, enabling major discoveries in diverse areas of science."
  • 2017: Chandrashekhar J. Joshi, an American experimental plasma physicist, for "groundbreaking contributions to and leadership in the field of plasma particle accelerators."[1]
  • 2016: Simon R. Cherry, an American positron emission tomography expert and biomedical engineer, for "contributions to the development and application of in vivo molecular imaging systems."[1]
  • 2015: Noah Hershkowitz, an American plasma physicist, for "innovative research and inspiring education in basic and applied plasma science."[1]
  • 2014: Three winners, for "developing maximum-likelihood image reconstruction in emission tomography leading to its widespread and effective use in healthcare."[1]
  • 2013: Veljko Radeka, a Croatian–American engineer and Brookhaven National Laboratory research scientist, for "the development of new radiation detectors, electronics, and systems that operate at the fundamental limits of performance, enabling discoveries in many areas of science."[2]
  • 2012: Gennady Andreevich Mesyats, a Soviet-born physicist, for "founding the field of nanosecond pulsed power and for seminal contributions to the physics of vacuum breakdown at high power levels."[3]
  • 2011: Ned Birdsall, an American experimental plasma physicist, for "theoretical investigations and fundamental discoveries involving microwave tubes, electron beam physics and particle-in-cell simulation of plasma physics."[4]

References


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