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Home   |   Programs   |   Prizes, Awards and Fellowships   |   Fellowships   |   Archive (1995-present)

Archive (1995-present)

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Ma, Ernest
University of California, Riverside
Citation: For fundamental contributions to gauge theory models and the phenomenology of electroweak interactions.
Nominated by: Particles and Fields (DPF)

Mallik, Usha
University of Iowa
Citation: For making significant contributions to the field of experimental high energy physics, particularly related to measurements of the J/Psi particle produced from electron-positron and electron-proton collisions.
Nominated by: Particles and Fields (DPF)

Marlow, Daniel Robert
Princeton University
Citation: For important contributions to the physics of rare decays of the K meson, and to the integration of electronics into the design of large detectors.
Nominated by: Particles and Fields (DPF)

Maron, Yitzhak
Weizmann Institute of Science
Citation: For pioneering the employment of novel spectroscopic methods to diagnose the field and plasma properties in pulsed-power systems, including the development of the atomic-physics modeling required for the data analysis.
Nominated by: Plasma Physics (DPP)

Martinez, Gérard Claude
CRNS
Citation: For contributions to our understanding of defects, superconductivity, and other many-body effects in semiconductors under conditions of high pressure and magnetic field.
Nominated by: Condensed Matter Physics (DCMP)

Mather, John C.
Goddard Space Flight Center
Citation: For his advancement of the science of cosmology through precise measurement of the spectrum of the cosmic microwave background radiation and discovery of the first evidence of primordial density inhomogeneities.
Nominated by: Astrophysics (DAP)

Maurer, Robert D.
Corning Glass Works, Retired
Citation: For fundamental studies of the optical properties of glass that led to the fabrication of the first low-loss optical fibers, now used worldwide for long distance telecommunication.


Nominated by: Industrial and Applied Physics (FIAP)

McFeely, Fenton Read
IBM Research Division
Citation: For his creative applications of photoemission techniques to the understanding of materials processes, interfaces and electronic structure, including etching and deposition reactions underlying microelectronics technology.
Nominated by: Materials Physics (DMP)

Melloch, Michael Raymond
Purdue University
Citation: For innovative epitaxial growth of semiconductor epilayers, quantum wells, and superlattices which have led to new materials, novel devices, and important advances in the physics of nanostructures.
Nominated by: Materials Physics (DMP)

Melott, Adrian Lewis
University of Kansas
Citation: For groundbreaking studies of the origin and evolution of cosmic structure.
Nominated by: Computational Physics (DCOMP)

Merkle, Karl L.
Argonne National Laboratory
Citation: For his contributions to the basic understanding of radiation-induced defects in solids and internal solid interfaces.
Nominated by: Materials Physics (DMP)

Merlin, Roberto Daniel
University of Michigan
Citation: For contributions to the understanding of vibrational and electronic properties of semiconducting and magnetic structures, and of artificial quasiperiodic structures.
Nominated by: Condensed Matter Physics (DCMP)

Messiter, Arthur F.
University of Michigan
Citation: For deep physical insight and careful analysis of complex flow problems, especially the formulation of interactive theories of boundary-layer flows at high Reynolds number.
Nominated by: Fluid Dynamics (DFD)

Meszaros, Peter I.
Pennsylvania State University
Citation: For valuable and influential contributions to the theory of radiation processes near magnetized neutron stars, gamma-ray burst sources, black holes and galaxy formation.


Nominated by: Astrophysics (DAP)

Meyer, Hans-Otto
Indiana University
Citation: For leadership in advancing the technology to use cooled stored beams and internal targets, which has led to new insights on the role of heavy meson exchange in the nucleon-nucleon force from precise measurements of threshold pion production.
Nominated by: Nuclear Physics (DNP)

Meystre, Pierre
University of Arizona
Citation: For seminal contributions to the theory of single-atom interactions with quantized radiation, and particularly for the first theory of micromaser action.
Nominated by: Atomic, Molecular, & Optical Physics (DAMOP)

Misewich, James Anthony
IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
Citation: For the development and application of innovative laser techniques to elucidate fundamental problems in molecular dynamics and molecule-surface interactions.
Nominated by: Laser Science (DLS)

Moss, Frank Edward
University of Missouri, St. Louis
Citation: For elucidating the structure of turbulent superfluid helium and for the discovery of stochastic resonance in sensory biology.
Nominated by: Biological Physics (DBP)

Murtagh, Michael J.
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Citation: For significant contributions to the study of neutrino interactions including charm and strange production, elastic scattering of electrons and protons, and neutrino oscillations.
Nominated by: Particles and Fields (DPF)

Mynick, Harry E.
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
Citation: For major contributions to the understanding of transport in toroidal systems, including nonaxisymmetric and turbulent transport of thermal and energetic particles in tokamaks and stellarators.
Nominated by: Plasma Physics (DPP)

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