APS Fellow Archive

The APS Fellow Archive contains records of many APS Fellows from 1921 to the present. Please note some Fellows may not be displayed or may display with limited information.

The archive is a historical record and is not updated to reflect current information. All institutional affiliations reflect the Fellows’ affiliations at the time of election to APS Fellowship.

For a current listing of Fellows who are active members, or to find Fellows currently affiliated with your institution, please use the APS Member Directory. For questions about the archive or to inquire about locating a record, please contact APS Honors Staff at honors@aps.org.

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Peter B. Arnold [2014]
University of Virginia
Citation: For accomplishments in developing gauge theories at high temperature.
Nominated by: DPF

David M. Asner [2014]
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Citation: For his leadership in heavy flavor physics and for his key role in the analysis and interpretation of CLEO data.
Nominated by: DPF

Mary R. Bishai [2014]
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Citation: For her contributions to flavor physics, including analysis of the NuMI/MINOS neutrino beam, leadership of the accelerator neutrino program, and contributions to understanding of the b-quark.
Nominated by: DPF

Roy Briere [2014]
Carnegie Mellon University
Citation: For important contributions to the physics of particles containing b and c quarks, crucial to the success of the CLEO and BESIII experiments, and for leadership roles in those experiments.
Nominated by: DPF

John M. Campbell [2014]
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Citation: For work in perturbative quantum chromodynamics, especially the precise simulation of standard model processes in high energy particle collisions.
Nominated by: DPF

Larry D. Gladney [2014]
University of Pennsylvania
Citation: For his contributions to the study of B physics at the Tevatron and Babar, and for his outstanding efforts in science teaching and outreach programs for middle- and high school students and teachers.
Nominated by: DPF

Eva Halkiadakis [2014]
Rutgers University
Citation: For her leadership in precision electroweak and top quark measurements at the Tevatron and searches for Supersymmetry at the LHC and for pioneering work in pursuit of new physics in multi-jet final states.
Nominated by: DPF

Deborah A. Harris [2014]
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Citation: For leadership in measuring the neutrino reactions that enable current and future accelerator neutrino oscillation experiments.
Nominated by: DPF

Jay Hauser [2014]
University of California, Los Angeles
Citation: For leadership in searches for new phenomena within the CDF and CMS collaborations, and in conception, design, construction, and operation of detector and trigger systems enabling these experiments.
Nominated by: DPF

David E. Kaplan [2014]
Johns Hopkins University
Citation: For contributions to models for new physics beyond the Standard Model, collider phenomenology, and dark-matter theory, and for his role as an inventive and effective leader in public outreach.
Nominated by: DPF

Wai-Yee Keung [2014]
University of Illinois, Chicago
Citation: For his influential contributions to elementary particle theory, including CP violation and electric dipole moments, Higgs physics, and collider phenomenology.
Nominated by: DPF

David R. Morrison [2014]
University of California, Santa Barbara
Citation: For his many contributions to the connection between geometry and physics, including spacetime singularities and topology change in string theory, generalizations of AdS/CFT duality, and foundational work in F theory.
Nominated by: DPF

Kevin T. Pitts [2014]
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Citation: For his leading role in heavy-flavor physics at the Tevatron Collider, including the first evidence of CP violation in bottom mesons, and for significant contributions to triggering at the Collider.
Nominated by: DPF

Peter C. Rowson [2014]
Stanford University
Citation: For his leading role in precision electroweak measurements in the SLD detector at the Stanford Linear Collider.
Nominated by: DPF

Maria Spiropulu [2014]
California Institute of Technology
Citation: For pioneering searches for supersymmetry and extra dimensions at the Tevatron, innovative searches for new physics and the study of the Higgs boson at the LHC, and key contributions to triggering and data flow for CDF and CMS.
Nominated by: DPF

Shufang Su [2014]
University of Arizona
Citation: For her fundamental contributions to the phenomenology of Higgs bosons, dark matter, supersymmetry, and other physics beyond the Standard Model, which have stimulated and guided experimental search programs.
Nominated by: DPF

Scott Thomas [2014]
Rutgers University
Citation: For contributions to the careful analysis of data from experiments at hadron colliders, to the phenomenology of many theories of physics beyond the Standard Model, and to supersymmetry, inflationary cosmology, and quantum gravity.
Nominated by: DPF

A. Zee [2014]
University of California, Santa Barbara
Citation: For his wide-ranging impact on particle physics, quantum field theory, condensed matter physics, cosmology, and biophysics, and in recognition of his unique popular writings and textbooks.
Nominated by: DPF