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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C F []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Ilya I Fabrikant [1995]
University of Nebraska
Citation: For his studies of electron collisions and Rydberg atom collisions involving the formation of temporary negative ions, and for photodetachment of negative ions in the presence of external static fields.
Nominated by: DAMOP

G. Faccioli [1923]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Charles Sherwood Fadley [1987]
University of California, Davis
Citation: For experimental and theoretical contributions to the development of photoelectron spectroscopy for core-level chemical shifts, multiplet splittings, surface-sensitivity enhancement, photoelectron diffraction, and angle-resolved valence band studies.
Nominated by: DCMP

Gerard M Faeth [2003]
University of Michigan
Citation: For contributions to understanding the dynamics of liquid breakup in sprays, the properties of self-preserving turbulent flows and the mechanism of turbulence generation in dispersed multiphase flows.
Nominated by: DFD

Lawrence W Fagg [1974]
Naval Research Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DNP

Stephen Bernard Fahy [2005]
Fahy, Stephen Bernard
Citation: For contributions to the development of variational wave function and pseudopotential quantum Monte Carlo methods and the application of electronic structure theory to materials under extreme pressures and photoexcitation.
Nominated by: DCOMP

Gioacchino Failla [1939]
Memorial Hospital
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Samuel C. Fain Jr. [1984]
University of Washington
Citation: For contributions and understanding of two dimensional phases of commensurate, incommensurate, and orientationally distinct structures and for improvements in low energy electron diffraction techniques.
Nominated by: DCMP

Anthony Fainberg [1993]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For fundamental analysis of national security issues of nuclear safeguards and nonproliferation, technology and counter-terrorism, and ballistic missile defenses, and contributions tot he field of national energy policy.
Nominated by: FPS

Henry A Fairbank []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

W M Fairbank [1957]
Duke University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

William Martin Fairbank [1988]

Citation: For pioneering work in single atom detection and its application to particle, nuclear, and atomic physics; and for contributions to precision dye laser spectroscopy.
Nominated by: DAMOP

C. O. Fairohild [1922]
Bureau of Standards
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Helmut Carl Faissner [1984]
No company provided
Citation: In recognition of his contributions to our understanding of the Electro-Weak Interaction, in particular of his pioneer work in connection with the discovery of Weak Neutral Currents.
Nominated by: DPF

Joel Fajans [1995]
University of California, Berkeley
Citation: For important basic experiments with free electron lasers and nonneutral plasmas.
Nominated by: DPP

Kasimir Fajans [1950]
University of Michigan
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Charles M. Falco [1987]
University of Arizona
Citation: For his unique and leading contributions in the area of metallic superlattices.
Nominated by: DCMP

Roger Wirth Falcone [1992]
University of California, Berkeley
Citation: For contributions to the physics and technology of ultrafast x-ray sources.
Nominated by: DLS

Leopoldo M Falicov [1969]
University of Chicago
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Adam Frederick Falk [2002]
Johns Hopkins University
Citation: For his contributions to the theoretical understanding of hadrons containing bottom and charm quarks.
Nominated by: DPF

Michael Lawrence Falk [2019]
Johns Hopkins University
Citation: For fundamental advances in our understanding of the mechanical response of amorphous solids through the use of innovative computational methods and theories that reveal the connection between local rearrangements and large scale response.
Nominated by: DCOMP

D L Falkoff [1957]
Brandeis University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Alan J Faller [1974]
University of Maryland
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DFD

James Elliot Faller [1991]
University of Colorado, Boulder
Citation: For his work in precision measurement and tests of fundamental physics.
Nominated by: GPMFC

Stavros Fallieros []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Stavros Fallieros [1972]
Brown University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Paul Fallon [2013]
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Citation: For use of gamma ray spectroscopic techniques to elucidate the behavior of atomic nuclei at the limits of existence, from the investigation of super-deformation at the highest angular momentum to studies of weakly bound states in light systems approaching the neutron drip-line.
Nominated by: DNP

Fereydoon Family [1990]
Emory University
Citation: For contributions in statistical physics including work on liquid helium, renormalization in polymer systems and DLA clusters, and the formation of a scaling theory for rough surfaces.
Nominated by: DCMP

Chang-Yun Fan []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Chang-Yun Fan [1975]
University of Arizona
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DAP

H Y Fan [1949]
Purdue University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Hongyou Fan [2016]
Sandia National Laboratories
Citation: For pioneering contributions to the development of novel synthesis methods and self-assembly processes to fabricate nanostructured materials for nanoelectronic and nanophotonic applications.
Nominated by: DMP

Hsu Yun Fan []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Shanhui Fan [2008]
Stanford University
Citation: Contributions to the theory and applications of nanophotonic structures and devices, including photonic crystals, plasmonics and meta-materials.
Nominated by: DLS

Marco Fanciulli [2015]
University of Milano, Bicocca
Citation: For outstanding contributions in the growth and characterization of materials and nanostructures for emerging devices for information processing.
Nominated by: FIAP

Bruno M Fanconi []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Frank F Fang []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Frank F Fang [1982]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Li Zhi Fang [2010]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Li-Zhi Fang [2010]
University of Arizona
Citation: For his important work in cosmology and early-universe physics; his inspiring leadership, teaching and mentoring of students in China, the United States and around the world; and his tireless, selfless, courageous and continuing advocacy of human rights in China.
Nominated by: FIP

P H Fang []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Zhong Fang [2011]
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Citation: For applying first-principle calculations to topological aspects of spin-orbital physics.
Nominated by: DCMP

Isidor Fankuchen [1941]
Anderson Institute for Biological Research
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

U Fano []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Ugo Fano [1956]
National Bureau of Standards
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Horacio A Farach [1977]
University of South Carolina
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Bruce J Faraday []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Bruce J Faraday [1969]
Naval Research Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Marie Farge [2011]
Ecole Normale Superieure
Citation: For pioneering research applying wavelets to the analysis and computation of turbulent flows in two and three dimensions.
Nominated by: DFD

Edward Farhi [2011]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: For his seminal discoveries of new quantum algorithms and quantum computational paradigms, in particular the quantum walk and quantum adiabatic methods.
Nominated by: DQI

Barry L. Farmer [1988]
Air Force Institute of Technology
Citation: For his leadership role in computer modeling of polymer conformations, structures, defects, crystallization, diffusion, and relaxations.
Nominated by: DPOLY

H. E. Farnsworth [1928]
Brown University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Glennys Reynolds Ferrar [1985]
New York University
Citation: For her pioneering work in perturbative QCD as applied to exclusive scattering processes and many other contributions to particle physics.
Nominated by: DPF

James Martin Farrar [1987]
University of Rochester
Citation: For contributions to the understanding of low energy ion-neutral collision dynamics, particularly related to gas proton transfer and laboratory studies of reactions important in interstellar chemistry.
Nominated by: DCP

David E. Farrell [1992]
Case Western Reserve University
Citation: For his contributions to the use of SQUIDs in biomagnetic research and his studies of anisotrophy in high- Tc superconductors.
Nominated by: DCMP

Robin F. C. Farrow [1998]
IBM Almaden Research Center
Citation: For pioneering the development of molecular beam epitaxy to grow and study epitaxial semiconductors, metastable phases, dielectrics, magnetic elements and alloys.
Nominated by: DMP

Robin F C Farrow [1998]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

George W Farwell []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

George Wells Farwell [1961]
University of Washington
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Ambrogio Fasoli [2008]

Citation: For fundamental experimental research on plasma wave phenomena including the dynamics of Alfven wave eignemodes in Tokamaks
Nominated by: DPP

Renee Fatemi [2022]
University of Kentucky
Citation: For contributions to the understanding of the spin and momentum structure of quarks and gluons in the proton through the novel development and application of jet reconstruction tools in polarized proton collisions.
Nominated by: GHP

Laurie A. Fathe [2001]
George Mason University
Citation: For serving as an example of a Civic Scientist - for ongoing work in promoting state and national policy that supports science and science education, and for her efforts to inspire and teach other scientists to be effective in the policy world.
Nominated by: FPS

Philippe M. Fauchet [1998]
University of Rochester
Citation: For experimental contributions to understanding properties of porous silicon.
Nominated by: DCMP

Lisa Fauci [2018]
Tulane University
Citation: For pioneering work in using modeling and simulation to understand the basic biophysics of organismal locomotion and reproductive fluid dynamics, and for her emphasis on the integrated study of stroke, form, and flow.
Nominated by: DFD

John S. Faulkner [1973]
Oak Ridge National Lab
Citation: Not Available
Nominated by: DNP

W R Faust [1953]
Naval Research Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Walter L Faust []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

William R Faust []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Andrea Favalli [2020]
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Citation: For outstanding application of the methods and underlying science of nuclear physics to the crucial issues of nuclear safeguards and security.
Nominated by: FPS

E Fawcett []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

William M. Fawley [2014]
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Citation: For his sustained contributions to beam physics, leading to the successful operation of coherent light source user facilities based on free-electron laser and related concepts and driving developments in intense relativistic electron and heavy-ion beam transport.
Nominated by: DPB

James A Fay [1964]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Michael David Fayer [1981]
Stanford University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCP

Charles S Fazel [1937]
The Solvay Process Company
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Giovanni G Fazio [1975]
Harvard University
Citation: Also approved by the Division of Astrophysics.
Nominated by: DPF

James Marshall Feagin [1998]
California State University, Fullerton
Citation: For advancements towards understanding the dynamical symmetries of the few-body Coulomb problem, particularly of low-energy bound and continuum electron pairs.
Nominated by: DAMOP

Harold W. Fearing [1990]
TRIUMF
Citation: For his contribution to the theoretical understanding of a variety of few-body processes at medium energies.
Nominated by: GFB

Jens Feder [1989]
University of Oslo
Citation: For contributions to theories and experiments on structural phase transitions and on fractals in aggregates and in porous media.
Nominated by: DCMP

Ralph Feder []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Ralph Feder [1986]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For pioneering the field of x-ray contact microscopy, and for his early contributions to the study of the equilibrium concentration of point defects in metals.
Nominated by: DCMP

Steven Robert Federman [2002]
University of Toledo
Citation: For high quality spectroscopic observations of interstellar species, especially those relevant to light element synthesis and chemical fractionation, and for measurements of oscillator strengths needed to interpret the data.
Nominated by: DAP

Alexei V. Fedotov [2022]
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Citation: For the demonstration of hadron beam cooling with RF accelerated electron beams.
Nominated by: DPB

Eugene Feenberg [1941]
New York University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Randall M. Feenstra [1997]
Carnegie Mellon University
Citation: For contributions to the development of the Scanning Tunneling Microscope as a spectroscopic tool to probe semiconductor surfaces and surface phenomena.
Nominated by: DCMP

George Feher [1961]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

George Feher [1960]
University of California, La Jolla
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Frederick C Fehsenfeld []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Frederick C Fehsenfeld [1974]
NOAA
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Peter Julian Feibelman [1981]
Sandia National Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Mikhail Feigelman [2007]
Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics
Citation: For contributions to the theory of disordered materials, in particular to pinned charge density waves, spin glasses, pinned vortices in superconductors, glass formation in systems without quenched disorder, and disordered superconductor-normal metal structures.
Nominated by: DCMP

Frank Joseph Feigl [1983]
Not available
Citation: For his delineation of basic defect structures in both crystal and amorphous forms of silicon dioxide, and establishment of the relationships of these structures to technologically important phenomena.
Nominated by: DCMP

Arnold M Feingold []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Michael Dennis Feit [1988]
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Citation: For the development and implementation of novel and powerful computational techniques with applications to optical propagation physics and the quantum theory of atoms and molecules and for contributing to the fundamental understanding of complex optical waveguiding devices.
Nominated by: DLS

Marc R Feix [1967]
Williamsburg, Virginia
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Gian Pero Felcher [1981]
Argonne National Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

B T Feld [1950]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Michael S Feld []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Lee A. Feldkamp [1996]
Ford Motor Company
Citation: For contributions in the application of physics to practical automotive control systems and computed tomography and to fundamental understanding of electron spectroscopies.
Nominated by: FIAP

David Feldman []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

David Feldman [1955]
University of Rochester
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Gary J. Feldman [1985]
Harvard University
Citation: For contributions to the discovery and study of new mesons and leptons.
Nominated by: DPF

Hume A. Feldman [2016]
University of Kansas
Citation: For his contributions to cosmology, particularly cosmological perturbations, the statistical and dynamical properties of the large scale structure of the universe, the innovative treatment of cosmic peculiar velocity fields, and the imposition of constraints on cosmological parameters.
Nominated by: DAP

Joseph L Feldman [2005]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Joseph Louis Feldman [2005]
Naval Research Laboratory
Citation: For the formulation and implementation of novel modeling methods for vibrational properties of disordered systems: thermal conductivity of amorphous silicon and localized vibronic Raman spectra of solid hydrogen.
Nominated by: DCOMP

Leonard C Feldman [1981]
Bell Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Paul D. Feldman [1986]
Johns Hopkins University
Citation: For his contributions to understanding the gasses in comets through their ultraviolet spectra, and his work on the upper atmospheres of the planets and the earth.
Nominated by: DAP

Uri Feldman [2000]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Uri Feldman [2000]
Naval Research Laboratory
Citation: For original contributions to the study of the atomic structure of highly excited elements, both the development of advanced tools to conduct observations and the analysis and interpretation of the resulting data; and for the application of the physics of highly excited elements to the study of energetic processes in the sun's atmosphere.
Nominated by: DPP

Joseph R Feldmeier [1961]
Philco Corporation
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Peter Mark Felker [1998]
University of California, Los Angeles
Citation: For the development of rotational coherence spectroscopy and ion-detected Raman spectroscopy and major contributions in the study of molecular clusters and intermolecular interactions.
Nominated by: DCP

Claudia Felser [2012]
Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
Citation: For creating and understanding new Heusler materials with spintronic and energy functionalities
Nominated by: DCMP

James E Felten []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

James E Felten [1975]
University of Arizona
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DAP

Paul Fendley [2013]
University of Virginia
Citation: For applying the mathematics of integrable systems to low dimensional systems, including spin chains and fractional quantum Hall states.
Nominated by: DCMP

Da H Feng [1996]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Da Hsuan Feng [1996]
Drexel University
Citation: For outstanding contributions to the understanding of nuclear structure physics, particularly for the application of the coherent states to physics and nuclear physics.
Nominated by: DNP

Donglai Feng [2016]
Fudan University
Citation: For seminal contributions to elucidating the electronic structure of quantum materials, particularly bulk and interface superconductivity in iron-based superconductors.
Nominated by: DCMP

Jimmy J. Feng [2013]
University of British Columbia
Citation: For pioneering studies of solid-liquid two-phase flows, interfacial dynamics of complex fluids, and phase-field modeling of the moving contact line.
Nominated by: DFD

Jonathan Feng [2007]
University of California, Irvine
Citation: For his contributions to the understanding of the properties of supersymmetric particles and the possible role of these particles in forming the dark matter of the universe.
Nominated by: DPF

Yuan Feng [2011]
National University of Singapore
Citation: For his contributions to the understanding of ferromagnetism in non-magnetic element doped semiconductors and new phenomena in carbon-based nano materials through computational studies and his untiring efforts in promoting international scientific collaborations in computational materials physics.
Nominated by: FIP

Craig Fennie [2015]
Cornell University
Citation: For the invention of novel mechanisms enabling dielectric, ferroelectric, and multiferroic functionalities in complex oxides, and identification of materials realizations through first principles methods.
Nominated by: DMP

Max E. Fenstermacher [2020]
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Citation: For using experiments and modeling to make important contributions to the understanding of tokamak divertor detachment, and to the characterization and control of edge-localized modes (ELMs) with resonant magnetic perturbations (RMPs) in magnetic fusion plasmas.
Nominated by: DPP

Paul Fenter [2007]
Argonne National Laboratory
Citation: For innovative application of x-ray scattering to the study of complex molecular-scale structures and processes at organic-inorganic and mineral-water interfaces.
Nominated by: DCMP

Flavio H Fenton [2019]
Georgia Institute of Technology
Citation: For ground-breaking contributions to the nonlinear dynamics of cardiac arrhythmia.
Nominated by: GSNP

Ervin J Fenyves []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Ervin J Fenyves [1973]
University of Texas, Dallas
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Thomas Ferbel [1984]
University of Rochester
Citation: For numerous and significant contributions to the field of experimental particle physics, particularly in the areas of hadron spectroscopy, inclusive reactions, diffractive dissociation, meson radiative decays, and direct photon production.
Nominated by: DPF

Michael Ference [1972]
Ford Motor Company
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

A J Ferguson []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Charles D. Ferguson II [2013]
Federation of American Scientists
Citation: For applying technical knowledge to public policy on nuclear issues, including nuclear energy, nonproliferation, nuclear and radiological terrorism, and nuclear safety and security; and for communicating that knowledge to society.
Nominated by: FPS

Eldon Earl Ferguson [1970]
ESSA Research Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

James M Ferguson [1963]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Francesca Ferlaino [2019]
University of Innsbruck
Citation: For ground-breaking experiments on dipolar quantum gases of erbium atoms, including the attainment of quantum degeneracy of bosons and fermions, studies on quantum-chaotical scattering, the formation of quantum droplets, and investigations on the roton spectrum.
Nominated by: DAMOP

Enrico Fermi [1939]
Columbia University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Rafael M. Fernandes [2017]
University of Minnesota
Citation: For pioneering works on nematic order and nematic fluctuations in iron-based superconductors and other strongly correlated materials.
Nominated by: DCMP

Juan C. Fernandez [2012]
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Citation: For outstanding and sustained contributions in laser-plasma interactions, relativistic laser-plasmas, and self-organizing force-free magnetized plasmas, and in their application to fusion research and national security
Nominated by: DPP

Julio Fernando Fernandez [1993]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For basic simulation contributions to the physics or disordered magnetic systems, especially of the random-field Ising model.
Nominated by: DCMP

Marivi Fernandez-Serra [2020]
Stony Brook University
Citation: For extending density functional theory in groundbreaking work on the structure and dynamics of complex materials, and especially for improving understanding of the electronic structure of water, including ice and interfaces.
Nominated by: DCOMP

Jaime Fernandez-Baca [2015]
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Citation: For seminal neutron scattering studies of magnetic materials, especially the spin and lattice dynamics of colossal magnetoresistive manganites.
Nominated by: DMP

Alberto Fernandez-Nieves [2023]
University of Barcelona (Spain)
Citation: For pioneering studies on the interplay between geometry, topology, and order in complex fluids, including geometrically frustrated liquid crystals, highly confined colloidal hydrogels, toroidal shaped drops and gels, drop formation in microfluidics, and mechanics and dynamics of fire ant collectives.
Nominated by: DSOFT

Harindra Joseph Fernando [2004]
Arizona State University
Citation: For contributing greatly to fundamental and applied environmental fluid mechanics, including notable discoveries for how turbulence interacts with stably stratified inversion layers via waves, instabilities and mixing events.
Nominated by: DFD

Sidney Fernbach [1963]
University of California, Livermore
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Andrea Carlo Ferrari [2011]
University of Cambridge
Citation: For pioneering contributions to the understanding of phonons and electron-phonon interactions in carbon based materials, particularly for establishing Raman spectroscopy as a standard characterisation tool.
Nominated by: DMP

Richard A Ferrell []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Richard A Ferrell [1967]
University of Maryland
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Thomas Lee Ferrell [2003]
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Citation: For his pioneering work in developing the photon scanning tunneling microscope and the elucidation of the fundamental physical principles underlying imaging and spectroscopic mechanisms of the photon scanning tunneling microscope.
Nominated by: GIMS

Antonio Ferri [1958]
Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

John R. Ferron [2006]
General Atomics
Citation: For contributions to the fundamental understanding and control of the MHD stability of high-pressure tokamak plasmas, including the stability of the H-mode edge.
Nominated by: DPP

Frank A. Ferrone [1997]
Drexel University
Citation: For development of novel instrumentation and methods to probe protein structure and assembly, and particularly for developing and elaborating a detailed physical picture of the polymerization of sickle hemoglobin.
Nominated by: DBIO

Dacid K Ferry [1977]
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

J D Ferry [1955]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

John D Ferry []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Herbert A Fertig [2001]
University of Kentucky
Citation: For his contributions to the theory of the two-dimensional electron gas in high magnetic fields.
Nominated by: DCMP

Joel H Ferziger []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Joel H Ferziger [1972]
Stanford University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DFD

Herman Feshbach []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Herman Feshbach [1949]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

John Gabriel Fetkovich [1969]
Carnegie Mellon University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DPF

G H Fett [1949]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Alexander L Fetter [1972]
Stanford University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Steven Alan Fetter [1994]
Stanford University
Citation: For scientific analysis on international security issues, especially his treatment of the Comprehensive Test Ban issues, and for service to policy makers in the departments of State and Defense.
Nominated by: FPS

Lewis John Fetters [1995]
Exxon Research & Engineering Co.
Citation: For developing controlled syntheses of numerous model polymers, and for providing exquisitely tailored materials essential for the critical evaluation of polymer theory.
Nominated by: DPOLY

Thomas E Feuchtwang [1978]
The Pennsylvania State University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCP

Richard Feynman [1946]
Cornell University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Kristen Fichthorn [2010]
Pennsylvania State University
Citation: For simulations that revealed new phenomena in the kinetics of reaction systems, self-assembly of nanostructures, and diffusion in mesoporous systems.
Nominated by: DCMP

Dieter Fick [1991]
Philipps University, Marburg
Citation: For his leadership in the development of beams of polarized heavy ions, and novel applications in the study of reaction mechanisms, nuclear shapes, and the study of surfaces.
Nominated by: DNP

Frederick R. Fickett [1989]
Not available
Citation: For contributions to measurement science in the fields of superconductivity and magnetics.
Nominated by: GIMS

Manfred Fiebig [2011]
Universität Bonn
Citation: For developments in non-linear optics and their application to solving seminal problems in multiferroics.
Nominated by: DMP

Heinrich Edwin Fiedler [1994]
Institute for Aerospace Research, Canada
Citation: For his archival experiments on the turbulent shear flows, especially mixing layers and jets.
Nominated by: DFD

George B Field []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

George B Field [1970]
University of California, Berkeley
Citation: Also approved by the Division of Plasma Physics.
Nominated by: DAMOP

Richard D. Field [1987]
University of Florida
Citation: For contributions to the application of the Quantum Chromodynamic theory of quarks and gluons to hadron hadron collisions and the concept of parton fragmentation.
Nominated by: DPF

Robert W. Field [1980]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCP

Brian Fields [2020]
University of Illinois
Citation: For pioneering contributions to cosmology, nuclear and particle astrophysics, nucleosynthesis, cosmic-ray physics, gamma-ray astronomy, astrobiology, and supernovae.
Nominated by: DAP

Thomas H Fields []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Thomas Henry Fields [1968]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DPF

Gregory A. Fiete [2016]
University of Texas at Austin
Citation: For contributions to the theory of correlated electron systems, including pioneering work on the spin-incoherent Luttinger liquid and interaction-driven topological phases.
Nominated by: DCMP

Gennady Fiksel [2013]
University of Rochester
Citation: For seminal contributions to the physics of magnetic self-organization and plasma transport from magnetic turbulence, and for the development of innovative plasma diagnostics, experimental techniques, and plasma sources.
Nominated by: DPP

Bradley Filippone [2009]
California Institute of Technology
Citation: In recognition of his many contributions to nuclear astrophysics, nucleon spin structure, nuclear interactions at short distances, and fundamental symmetries and especially the development of experimental techniques to meet these challenges.
Nominated by: DNP

Jay Fineberg [2011]
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Citation: For his clever experiments and analyses of the dynamics of nonequilibrium systems, particularly concerning the propagation and instabilities of cracks in solids and gels, the dynamics of friction and earthquakes, and instabilities in oscillated liquid layers.
Nominated by: GSNP

Leonard X. Finegold [1992]
Drexel University
Citation: For contributions to the experimental physics of simple model proteins and model membranes, and of lattice dynamics, at low and biological temperatures.
Nominated by: DBIO

Herman Joseph Fink [1969]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Joerg Hermann Fink [2003]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Jorg Fink [2003]
IFW Dresden, Germany
Citation: For his eminent work on electron spectroscopies of novel materials, in particular of cuprate superconductors, fullerenes, nanotubes, and conducting polymers.
Nominated by: DMP

Manfred K Fink []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Manfred K. Fink [1994]
University of Texas, Austin
Citation: For the extension of high energy electron scattering to high temperature compounds, biological molecules, the determination of molecular charge densities and state selected molecules.
Nominated by: DAMOP

Richard W Fink [1974]
Georgia Institute of Technology
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Douglas Finkbeiner [2015]
Harvard University
Citation: For work as one of the world’s leading practitioners of “big data” science, exploiting the entire electromagnetic spectrum, from radio waves to gamma rays, with rigorous attention to the underlying physics of what are often complex phenomena.
Nominated by: DAP

Wolfgang Finkelnburg [1949]
Fort Belvoir
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Alexander Finkelstein [2013]
Texas A&M University, College Station
Citation: For the theory of the metal-insulator transition in interacting disordered systems.
Nominated by: DCMP

Gleb Finkelstein [2015]
Duke University
Citation: For significant experimental studies of quantum transport in nanostructures, especially electron correlation effects in artificial quantum impurity systems.
Nominated by: DCMP

Noah Finkelstein [2011]
University of Colorado, Boulder
Citation: For advancing physics education research through studies of student learning in context and for extensive professional service at all levels from individual mentoring, to developing model programs, to national advocacy.
Nominated by: FED

Robert J Finkelstein []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Roger Finlay []
Ohio University
Nominated by: APS

John McMaster Finn [1988]
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Citation: For contributions to nonlinear dynamics perturbation techniques, and to understanding of basic processes in low frequency behavior of plasmas, including the role of nonlinear dynamics in orbits and field lines.
Nominated by: DPP

Lee Samuel Finn [2002]
Pennsylvania State University
Citation: For innovative contributions to the computational infrastructure for gravitational wave detection, detector modeling, data analysis and source simulations.
Nominated by: DCOMP

Douglas K Finnemore [1969]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Laura Finzi [2023]
Physics Department, Emory University
Citation: For pioneering work on magnetic tweezers to resolve the difference between full polymer elastic theory and the simplifying freely jointed chain model and to demonstrate the key role of DNA supercoiling in transcription regulation, and for using tethered particle motion to study genetic switches.
Nominated by: DBIO

Dino Fiorani [2012]
National Research Council of Italy
Citation: For his contribution to the physics of nanostructured materials and his contribution to the international aspect of physics through organization of international science meetings
Nominated by: FIP

Ralph Bruno Fiorito [2002]
Catholic University of America
Citation: For pioneering contributions to the understanding and application of transition radiation, diffraction radiation and parametric x-radiation.
Nominated by: DPB

Floyd A Fireston [1936]
University of Michigan
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Alexander Firestone [1981]
Iowa State University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DPF

Richard Brian Firestone [2017]
University of California, Berkeley
Citation: For contributions to nuclear data evaluation, including the 8th Edition of the Table of Isotopes, his work in capture gamma ray spectroscopy that has improved our knowledge of nuclear level densities and photon strengths, and for his application of nuclear techniques to biology and planetary science.
Nominated by: DNP

Nathaniel Joseph Fisch [1987]
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
Citation: For developing the conceptual and theoretical basis by which radio frequency wave drive currents in toroidal confinement devices, thereby creating the possibility of steady-state tokamak fusion reactors.
Nominated by: DPP

Ephraim Fischbach [2001]
Purdue University
Citation: For his contributions to understanding the connection between precision gravity measurements and high-energy physics.
Nominated by: GPMFC

Charlotte F Fischer []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Charlotte Froese Fischer [1990]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For developing the numerical approach to the Hartree-Fock method for atoms; for providing benchmark oscillator strengths; for discovery of the calcium negative ion.
Nominated by: DAMOP

Erhard Wolfgang Fischer [1997]
Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research
Citation: For his many seminal contributions to the fundamental understanding of the structure and properties of solid polymers.
Nominated by: FIP

John E Fischer []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

John Edward Fischer [1992]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For seminal studies of layered solids and for developing a unified approach to phase equilibria in guest-host systems with competing interactions such as graphite intercalation compounds, polyacetylene, and fullernes.
Nominated by: DMP

Peter Fischer [2014]
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Citation: For contributions to imaging spin structures and their dynamics with high resolution magnetic soft x-ray microscopy.
Nominated by: GMAG

Traugott E Fischer [1970]
Yale University
Citation: Also approved by the Division of Condensed Matter Physics
Nominated by: DAMOP

Wolfram Fischer [2007]
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Citation: For the successful commissioning of high luminosity high energy collisions at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider and outstanding contributions to the understanding of high-energy accelerator and collider properties.
Nominated by: DPB

Massimo Vincenzo Fischetti [1996]
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Citation: For the development of first-principle modeling that predicts accurately the performance of sub-micron semiconductor devices.
Nominated by: FIAP

Andrew James Fisher [2005]
University College London
Citation: For his contributions to the theory of electronic phenomena at the nanoscale.
Nominated by: DCP

Daniel S Fisher []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Daniel Sebastian Fisher [1986]
Stanford University
Citation: For his application of the modern techniques of statistical mechanics to such diverse systems as two-dimensional phase transitions, solid 3He, charge-density-wave solids, and disordered magnets.
Nominated by: DCMP

Galen B. Fisher [2004]
Delphi Research Laboratories
Citation: For distinguished research in heterogeneous catalysis, using surface science techniques and principles.
Nominated by: FIAP

George P Fisher [2004]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Gerhard E. Fisher [1992]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For many contributions to the development of accelerator technology, including his most recent work no alignment, ground motion and vibration issues for linear colliders.
Nominated by: DPB

Ian R. Fisher [2013]
Stanford University
Citation: For pioneering research in the electronic properties and crystal growth of quantum materials.
Nominated by: DMP

John C Fisher [1960]
General Electric Research Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

L H Fisher [1955]
New York University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Leon H Fisher []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Matthew P. A. Fisher [1998]
University of California, Santa Barbara
Citation: For contributions to theories of vortex states, superconductor-insulator transitions, and edge states in the quantum Hall effect.
Nominated by: DCMP

Matthew P A Fisher []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Michael E Fisher []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Peter Fisher []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Peter Fisher [1972]
Purdue University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Peter H. Fisher [2006]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: For initiating Tau Polarization Asymmetry Measurements and W-Boson self couplings, leading to a top mass prediction (found later at FNAL). First proof of single W-production in e+ e- annihilation. Determination of sin20w with proposal to expand to highest accuracy of 10-5 at LHC.
Nominated by: DPF

Raymond Kurt Fisher [1997]
General Atomics
Citation: For innovative leading-edge contributions, including the first measurements of confined alphas and knock-on tails, the first observations of plasma resonance cones, and pioneering experiments on non-circular tokamaks.
Nominated by: DPP

Gerald J. Fishman [1995]
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
Citation: For pioneering advances in gamma-ray astronomy, particularly his important observations of gamma-ray bursts that suggest a possible cosmological origin.
Nominated by: DAP

Randy Fishman [2014]
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Citation: For theoretical studies of the spin dynamics of multiferroic and spin-density wave materials, and for modeling inelastic neutron-scattering spectra.
Nominated by: DCMP

Henry Eugene Fisk [1990]
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Citation: For his leadership in the neutrino physics research, and his skilled management of large scientific projects including superconducting high-gradient quadrupoles and Fermilab's DO detector.
Nominated by: DPF

James B Fisk [1939]
Bell Telephone Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Zachary Fisk [1985]
University of California, Irvine
Citation: For important contributions to the synthesis and understanding of new materials in single crystal form, particularly high critical temperature superconductors and heavy Fermion superconductors.
Nominated by: DCMP

Wladyslaw Fiszdon [1986]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For his lasting contributions to Aerodynamics and for his tireless efforts in promoting the development of Fluid Dynamics through he Biennial Fluid Dynamics Symposia that he has organized in Poland since 1951.
Nominated by: DFD

Val L Fitch []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Val Logsden Fitch [1964]
Princeton University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Carl E Fitchel [1976]
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DAP

Carl E Fitchel [1975]
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DAP

Douglas B. Fitchen [1989]
Cornell University
Citation: For contributions to the understanding of defects and impurities in solids and for studies of the properties of conducting polymers.
Nominated by: DCMP

Wade L Fite []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Wade L Fite [1961]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Edwin R Fitzgerald []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Edwin R Fitzgerald [1962]
Johns Hopkins University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Richard Fitzpatrick [2003]
University of Texas, Austin
Citation: For original research on feedback stabilization of resistive wall modes, error field-driven reconnection, and tearing mode phase-locking and stability in magnetic fusion confinement devices.
Nominated by: DPP

Michael R. Fitzsimmons [2006]
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Citation: For his work in elucidating the magnetization reversal processes in exchange bias systems using polarized neutron reflectometry.
Nominated by: GMAG

William A Fitzsimmons [1977]
University of Wisconsin
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DAMOP

Frederico Fiuza [2023]
Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon
Citation: For leadership and fundamental contributions to the plasma physics of energetic particle generation from collisionless shocks, magnetic reconnection, and MHD instabilities.
Nominated by: DPP

Marshall Fixman [1962]
University of Oregon
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Karen A. Flack [2014]
US Naval Academy
Citation: For her clarifying work on the structure of three dimensional turbulent boundary layers, and for better characterizing the connections between surface roughness geometry and boundary layer drag.
Nominated by: DFD

Victor Flambaum [2010]
University of New South Wales
Citation: For searches for violations of fundamental symmetries and for space-time variation of fundamental constants, to atomic many-body theory, and to quantum chaos.
Nominated by: DAMOP

Steven Flammia [2022]
AWS Center for Quantum Computing
Citation: For proposing, analyzing, and implementing novel techniques to characterize quantum states and processes and to characterize and correct errors in quantum processes.
Nominated by: DQI

Eanna Flanagan [2007]
Cornell University
Citation: In recognition of his contributions to gravitational physics, ranging from the physics of gravitational waves and their detection, to the astrophysics of neutron stars, and to cosmology and quantum gravity.
Nominated by: DGRAV

M R Flannery [1979]
JILA
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DAMOP

Raymond Flannery []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Stanley M Flatte [1997]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Amy K. Flatten [2018]
American Physical Society
Citation: In recognition of her program development serving physicists worldwide, especially in support of scientists in the Middle East through the SESAME Travel Award Program, and for fostering new opportunities for international collaboration among young physicists from diverse cultural backgrounds.
Nominated by: FIP

Stanley Martin Flatti [1997]
University of California, Santa Cruz
Citation: For work on meson spectroscopy and for work on wave propagation in random media with innovative contributions to ocean acoustics, atmospheric optics, seismology, and numerical simulation.
Nominated by: APS

Michael Flatte [2007]
University of Iowa
Citation: For contributions to the theory of spin-dependent properties of semiconductors, especially transient and inhomogeneous magnetic and optical properties, and applications to spintronic devices.
Nominated by: DCMP

Brenna L. Flaugher [2011]
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Citation: For her important contributions to experimental particle astrophysics, particularly her leadership of and seminal contributions to the design and construction of the Dark Energy Camera.
Nominated by: DAP

Joseph A Fleck []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Daniel Mark Fleetwood [2001]
Vanderbilt University
Citation: For important and broad-based contributions to the understanding of radiation effects and low-frequency noise in microelectronic materials and devices.
Nominated by: FIAP

Robert L Fleischer []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Robert Louis Fleischer [1969]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Hans Fleischmann []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Bonnie T. Fleming [2013]
Yale University
Citation: In recognition of her leadership in neutrino physics and her role in promoting the liquid argon techniques for neutrino detection.
Nominated by: DPF

Donald G. Fleming [2012]
TRIUMF
Citation: For his pioneering studies utilizing muons as uniquely sensitive isotopic probes of molecular interactions and quantum mass effects in the chemical sciences
Nominated by: DCP

Robert McLemore Fleming [1988]
Sandia National Laboratories
Citation: For contributions to our understanding of the structural and transport properties of charge density waves in transition metal compounds.
Nominated by: DCMP

John G Fletcher []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Robert C Fletcher []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Paul A Fleury []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Arne Woolset Fliflet [1993]
Naval Research Laboratory
Citation: For significant and outstanding contributions to research on electron cyclotron masers, pioneering work on gyrotron and cyclotron auto-resonance maser theory, and in experimental quasioptical gyrotron research.
Nominated by: DPP

Paul A Flinn [1962]
Westinghouse Research Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Fernando Flores []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Fernando Flores [1987]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For his contributions to the theory of electronic surface states, metal-semiconductor interfaces, and the interaction of energetic probes with surfaces and bulk matter.
Nominated by: DCMP

Curt A. Flory [1997]
Hewlett-Packard Laboratories
Citation: For the imaginative use of theoretical physics in the analysis and creation of precision frequency standards, microwave sources, acoustic signal processing and sensing devices, and mass spectrometry instrumentation.
Nominated by: FIAP

Paul J. Flory [1962]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Jerzy Floryan [2015]
University of Western Ontario
Citation: For seminal illumination of the critical influence of surface topography and heating on surface drag; and the onset of shear-, centrifugal-, buoyancy-, and parametric-resonance driven instabilities; and their characterization.
Nominated by: DFD

Acey L Floyd []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Paul A Fluery [1975]
Bell Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DPP

Willis H Flygare [1968]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCP

Colin P Flynn []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Edward R Flynn [1977]
Los Alamos Science Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DNP

George William Flynn [1984]
Columbia University
Citation: For his outstanding contributions to the understanding of vibrational energy transfer; through his ingenious experimental application of laser techniques to study excitation, photofragmentation and collisional energy transfer in polyatomic molecules.
Nominated by: DCP

Alfred B Focke [1936]
Brown University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Zoltan Fodor [2022]
Pennsylvania State University
Citation: For outstanding contributions to Quantum Chromodynamics and its quantitative predictions, including the physics of the quark-gluon plasma and the QCD phase transition, precision determination of the hadronic mass spectrum, and the hadronic contribution to the g-2 anomalous magnetic moment of the muon.
Nominated by: DPF

Michael M. Fogler [2018]
University of California, San Diego
Citation: For contributions to the theory of electronic and optical properties of two-dimensional systems, in particular, charge-density waves in the quantum Hall effect regime and near-field optical phenomena in van der Waals materials.
Nominated by: DCMP

Stephen M. Foiles [2000]
Sandia National Laboratories
Citation: For significant advances in the computational simulation of materials including pioneering work on the embedded atom method and demonstrating the power of simulations to determine important properties.
Nominated by: DCOMP

L L Foldy [1950]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Leslie L Foldy []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Vincent J Folen []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Vincent J Folen [1965]
Washington, D.C.
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Vincent J Folen [1968]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

H M Foley [1949]
Columbia University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Kenneth J Foley []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Kenneth J Foley [1973]
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DPF

Jeffrey J. Folkins [1999]
Xerox Corporation
Citation: For applications of physics to electrophotography resulting in major innovations in the design of development subsystems and in color Xerographic marking systems.
Nominated by: FIAP

Raymond J. Fonck [1992]
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Citation: For pioneering advances in optical diagnostics; especially neutral-beam-based diagnostics central to the experimental understanding of transport in tokamak plasmas.
Nominated by: DPP

Gorton R Fonda [1939]
General Electric Company
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Samuel N Foner []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Samuel N Foner [1959]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Simon Foner []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Simon Foner [1962]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Ching Yao Fong [1995]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Ching-Yao Fong [1995]
University of California, Davis
Citation: For pioneering work in developing theoretical models and applying them to computational studies of the fundamental electronic and vibrational properties of semiconductor systems.
Nominated by: DCOMP

Dillon D. Fong [2023]
Argonne National Laboratory
Citation: For the development and application of in situ synchrotron techniques to the study of complex oxide heterostructures, including seminal discoveries in ferroelectrics, the effect of interfaces on epitaxial growth, and the use of phase retrieval methods for the study of structure in ultrathin films.
Nominated by: DMP

Peter Fong [1969]
Emory University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DNP

Antonio Carlos de Sa Fonseca [1992]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For significant theoretical contributions to our understanding of few-body systems in atomic, molecular and nuclear physics.
Nominated by: GFB

Didler de Fontaine [1993]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For his continuing theoretical contributions to our understanding of kinetics of crystal growth in covalent systems and of solute trapping in rapid solidification processing.
Nominated by: DMP

Christopher J. Fontes [2017]
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Citation: For pioneering contributions to our understanding of atomic processes in plasmas and their application to a broad range of physics problems including nuclear fusion, laboratory experiment and astrophysics.
Nominated by: DAMOP

Christopher John Foot [2003]
University of Oxford
Citation: For seminal contributions to the practice of laser cooling of atoms, and the elucidation of rotational dynamics and excitation mechanisms in dilute Bose-Einstein condensates.
Nominated by: DAMOP

Alexander Forbes [1928]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Jerry Wayne Forbes [1992]
Energetics Technology Center
Citation: In recognition of his contributions to shockwave physics and in particular, his outstanding leadership in the shockwave community and additions to the understanding of phase transformations.
Nominated by: GCCM

S E Forbush [1957]
Carnegie Institute
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Albert Lewis Ford [1988]
Texas A&M University
Citation: For contributions in theoretical atomic and molecular physics, specifically studies of the properties of small molecules and of excitation, ionization, and charge transfer in ion-atom collisions.
Nominated by: DAMOP

James L.C. Ford [1976]
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Joseph Ford [1989]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For pioneering contributions in classical and quantal chaos, and for fundamental and significant contributions to theory of statistical mechanics, ergodicity, and stochasticity, and chaos.
Nominated by: DCP

Kenneth W Ford []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Lawrence H Ford [2004]
Tufts University
Citation: For pioneering contributions to quantum field theory in flat and curved spacetime.
Nominated by: DGRAV

William T. Ford [1987]
University of Colorado, Boulder
Citation: For his contributions to research in elementary particles and his measurement of the lifetime of particles containing b quarks.
Nominated by: DPF

Geoffrey Forden [2007]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: For Innovative and important contributions to arms control and international security, in areas such as proliferation of chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, military space programs, early warning systems, and ballistic missile defenses.
Nominated by: FPS

Cary Forest [2008]
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Citation: For broad and fundamental advances in plasma physics, from electromagnetic wave propagation and transport processes in fusion plasmas to dynamo effects underlying geomagnetic and astrophysical magnetic field generation
Nominated by: DPP

Gabor Forgacs [2008]
University of Missouri
Citation: For his original contributions to the elucidation of physical mechanisms in early morphogenesis, intracellular signaling, establishment of the technology of organ printing, as well as for his synergistic and educational activity to bridge the gap between the physical and life sciences.
Nominated by: DBIO

Richard Lynn Fork []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Richard L Fork [1967]
Bell Telephone Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Joseph Angelo Formaggio [2019]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: For leadership in the pursuit of neutrino masses determination, and for developing novel technologies to attack the problem of direct detection.
Nominated by: DNP

Miriam Ausman Forman [1984]
State University of New York
Citation: For Fundamental contributions to the theory of propagation and acceleration of energetic particles in the solar system and for application of the theory in the interpretation of observation.
Nominated by: DAP

Paul Forman [1988]
Smithsonian Inst
Citation: For his research on the history and cultural background of modern physics, and for his development of museum exhibits presenting physics to the public.
Nominated by: FHPP

James A. Forrest [2008]
University of Waterloo
Citation: For pioneering work in the dynamics of confined polymers and polymer surfaces.
Nominated by: DPOLY

Stephen Forrest [2008]
University of Michigan
Citation: For contributions to the fundamental understanding of the thin film growth, and physics of excitons in organic materials, leading to the demonstration of high efficiency organic light emitting devices, organic photovoltaics and organic lasers.
Nominated by: DMP

A T Forrester [1957]
University of South Carolina, Westinghouse
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Robert C. Forrey [2011]
Pennsylvania State University
Citation: For contributions to the understanding of internal energy transfer in atomic and molecular systems and for meaningful involvement of undergraduate students in research.
Nominated by: DAMOP

László Forró [2023]
University of Notre Dame
Citation: For groundbreaking advances in the understanding of superconductors, C60, carbon nanotubes, and other nano- and biomaterials through the creative application of diverse techniques for synthesis, measurement, and analysis.
Nominated by: DMP

Harold K Forsen []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

David W. Forslund [1980]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DPP

Christian Forssén [2021]
Chalmers University of Technology
Citation: For first-principles calculations of the structure of nuclei, especially near the drip-lines, and for the development of precision nuclear forces through innovative uses of statistical methods.
Nominated by: GFB

Harold Forstat [1968]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

H H Forster []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Tara Fortier [2022]
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Citation: For pioneering contributions to phase stabilized mode-locked lasers and optical combs, fundamental tests of physics with precision optical spectroscopy, and the development and comparisons of optical atomic clocks with unprecedented precision.
Nominated by: DLS

Vladimir E. Fortov [2002]
Russian Academy of Sciences
Citation: For pioneering work on the physical properties of hot dense plasmas at multimegabar pressures and very high temperatures achieved with shock compression.
Nominated by: GCCM

Edward Norval Fortson [1978]
University of Washington
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DAMOP

Lucy Frear Fortson [2020]
University of Minnesota
Citation: For groundbreaking innovations to public engagement in astrophysics research, and for the fundamental advancement of understanding active galactic nuclei through leadership in high energy gamma ray astronomy.
Nominated by: DAP

Santo Fortunato [2022]
Indiana University Bloomington
Citation: For foundational contributions to the statistical physics of complex networks, and particularly to the study of community detection in networks and applications to social and scientific networks.
Nominated by: GSNP

H Terry Fortune [1974]
University of Pennsylvania
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DNP

John F. Foss [2013]
Michigan State University
Citation: For fundamental experimentation of complex flows, novel surface topology analyses and for ground-breaking vorticity measurements.
Nominated by: DFD

M H Foss [1957]
Argonne National Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Martyn H Foss []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

David B Fossan [1984]
State University of New York, Stony Brook
Citation: For important contributions to the study of electromagnetic properties of nuclei.
Nominated by: DNP

Donald D Foster [1936]
Bell Telephone Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

George William Foster [1998]
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Citation: For contributions to development of large scale particle physics electronics, and for a leading role in the design of the permanent magnetic-based Fermilab Antiproton Recycler ring.
Nominated by: DPF

J Stuart Foster [1937]
McGill University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

John S. Foster [1923]
Yale University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

John Edison Foster [2021]
The University of Michigan
Citation: For contributions to improving fundamental understanding of transport across the span of low temperature plasmas, from space propulsion to plasma-liquid interfaces, and for translating that understanding to the development of technologies that benefit society.
Nominated by: DPP

Mark D Foster [2018]
The University of Akron
Citation: For the elucidation of molecular architecture effects on surface segregation and polymeric film surface fluctuations using neutron and X-ray scattering techniques.
Nominated by: DPOLY

Thomas H Foster [2001]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Thomas Harrison Foster [2001]
University of Rochester
Citation: For his unique and successful applications of physical concepts to the understanding and advancement of magnetic resonance imaging, photodynamic therapy, and diffuse-light optical studies of tissues.
Nominated by: DBIO

John T. Fourkas [2002]
Boston College
Citation: For his experimental and theoretical contributions in the use of nonlinear optical techniques to study dynamics in condensed phases.
Nominated by: DCP

Frederick E Fowle [1931]
Smithsonian Institute
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Alan Bicksler Fowler [1968]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

C M Fowler [1963]
Los Alamos Science Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Earle C Fowler []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Michael Fowler [1994]
University of Virginia
Citation: For the application of the Bethe Ansatz method to the solution of challenging problems in one-dimensional systems.
Nominated by: DCMP

R H Fowler [1936]
University of Cambridge
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Richard G Fowler [1959]
University of Oklahoma
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

T L Fowler [1946]
Los Alamos Science Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Thomas Kenneth Fowler [1965]
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

W Beall Fowler []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

W A Fowler [1938]
California Institute of Technology
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Wiliam B Fowler [1968]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DPF

G Richard Fowles [1997]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

G. Richard Fowles [1997]
Washington State University
Citation: For contributions to the education of shock compression scientists and for pioneering theoretical and experimental investigations in shock physics, including elastic-plastic shock compression.
Nominated by: GCCM

F E Fox [1952]
Catholic University of America
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Geoffrey C Fox []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Geoffrey Charles Fox [1989]
Syracuse University
Citation: For contributions centered on novel uses of computers; firstly, in the phenomenological comparison of theory and experiment in particle physics, and secondly, in the design and use of parallel computers.
Nominated by: DPF

Gerald W Fox [1935]
Iowa State College
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

J G Fox [1949]
Carnegie Institute
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

John D Fox []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

John David Fox [1968]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

John Fox [2008]
Stanford University
Citation: For leadership in developing instrumentation and instability control systems for colliders and light sources, for applying control formalism to accelerator problems, and for developing novel beam instruments and new formalisms.
Nominated by: DPB

Kenneth Fox [1983]
No company provided
Citation: For innovative and creative contributions to theory, experiment, and astrophysical studies involving highly symmetric spherical-top molecules like methane; revealing unexpected and significant physical and astrophysical phenomena.
Nominated by: DCP

Patrick Fox [2016]
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Citation: For phenomenological and theoretical developments in physics beyond the standard model, particularly in connecting searches at colliders with those at dark matter detection experiments.
Nominated by: DPF

R E Fox [1956]
Westinghouse Research Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Rodney Fox [2007]
Iowa State University
Citation: For ground-breaking contributions to the field of turbulent reacting flows.
Nominated by: DFD

Ronald Forrest Fox []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Ronald Forrest Fox [1991]
Georgia Institute of Technology
Citation: For contributions to the theory of stochastic processes, their numerical simulation, and their application to the analysis of experiments, both in fluids and in quantum systems.
Nominated by: APS

Russell E Fox []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Thomas G Fox [1962]
Mellon Institute
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Seth Fraden [2020]
Brandeis University
Citation: For leadership in experimental soft matter physics, notably entropy-driven order in phase behavior, structure, and dynamics.
Nominated by: DSOFT

Frank Y Fradin [1978]
Northern Illinois University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

David M Fradkin []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Eduardo Hector Fradkin [1998]
University of Illinois
Citation: For the application of quantum field theory methods to condensed matter physics.
Nominated by: DCMP

George K Fraenkel []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

George K Fraenkel [1962]
Columbia University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Z Fraenkel []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Paul Howard Frampton [1981]
University of North Caroline, Chapel Hill
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DPF

Giuliano Franchetti [2021]
GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH
Citation: For broad, impactful advancements in the understanding of lattice resonances for the high intensity regime, and for exceptional leadership in the community.
Nominated by: DPB

Alfonso Franciosi [2001]
Instituto Nazionale di Fisica della Materia, Trieste, Italy
Citation: For his contribution to the understanding of the properties of interfaces, including semiconductor heterojunctions and metal/semiconductor contacts, and his efforts to bridge the gap between basic interface science and applications.
Nominated by: DMP

Joseph S. Francisco [1998]
Purdue University
Citation: For his fundamental contributions to the theoretical and spectroscopic elucidation of critical transient species in atmospheric chemical processes.
Nominated by: DCP

Victor Franco [1973]
Brooklyn College
Citation: Not Available
Nominated by: APS

Alejandro Hoeflich Frank [1998]
Instituto de Ciencias Nucleares
Citation: For fundamental contributions to the development and application of algebraic models in nuclear physics, and especially to algebraic scattering theory and the discovery of scissors states in odd-mass nuclei.
Nominated by: FIP

Curtis W Frank []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Curtis W. Frank [1988]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For innovative application of fluorescence methods to the study of polymeric systems in order to characterize their molecular environment both in solution and in the solid state.
Nominated by: DPOLY

Louis Albert Frank []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Louis A. Frank [1989]
University of Iowa
Citation: For the development of a whole generation of charged-particle detectors used to measure plasma distribution functions in outer space.
Nominated by: DPP

Nathaniel H Frank [1936]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Philipp Frank [1945]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Richard B Frankel []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Richard B Frankel [1974]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: Also approved by the Forum on Physics and Society, the Forum Outreach and Engaging Public, and the Division of Biological Physics.
Nominated by: DCMP

Sherman Frankel [1961]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Sherman Frankel [1960]
University of Pennsylvania
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Leonid Frankfurt [2007]
Tel Aviv University
Citation: For seminal contributions to high energy and high momentum transfer probes of hadrons and nuclei including: inventing the additive quark model, deriving the light front approach to nuclei, showing how to observe nucleon-nucleon corrections, and discovery of high-energy color transparency.
Nominated by: DNP

Daniel R Frankl []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Daniel R Frankl [1968]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Alan D Franklin []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Alan D Franklin [1958]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Allan David Franklin [1988]
University of Colorado, Boulder
Citation: For his research in the history of theories and experiments in medieval and modern physics.
Nominated by: FHPP

Joe L Franklin [1958]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Melissa Franklin []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Melissa E.B. Franklin [1993]
Harvard University
Citation: For contributions to the study of gauge bosons produced in proton-antiproton collisions.
Nominated by: DPF

Scott Franklin [2020]
Rochester Institute of Technology
Citation: For decades of work to support emerging and diverse scholars in physics education research and to foster a vibrant and sustained PER community.
Nominated by: FED

James Franson [2010]
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Citation: For contributions to quantum mechanics, quantum optics and quantum information processing.
Nominated by: DAMOP

Frank Andrew Franz [1969]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Also approved by the Division of Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics.
Nominated by: DCP

Judith R Franz [1982]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Marcel Franz [2014]
University of British Columbia
Citation: For contributions to the theory of topological states of quantum matter.
Nominated by: DCMP

Wolfgang Franzen []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Wolfgang Franzen [1965]
Boston University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Paolo Franzini [1991]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For forefront research over many years spanning many topics, especially classical measurements of the bound states spectroscopy of the bottom and anti-bottom quarks.
Nominated by: DPF

Gerald Timothy Fraser [1998]
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Citation: For major contributions to the understanding of weak intermolecular forces, vibrational couplings, intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution, and the development of the technique of electric-resonance optothermal spectroscopy.
Nominated by: DCP

John S Fraser []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

John Stiles Fraser [1968]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DNP

Stefan Gottfried Frauendorf [2003]
University of Notre Dame
Citation: For his seminal contributions to the physics of rotating nuclei via mean-field symmetries.
Nominated by: DNP

Hans Frauenfelder [1961]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Hans Frauenfelder [1961]
University of Illinois
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Steven Frautschi [2015]
California Institute of Technology
Citation: For contributions to the introduction of Regge poles into particle physics, elucidation of the role of infrared photons in high energy scattering, and for seminal contributions to undergraduate physics education.
Nominated by: GERA

John G Frayne [1931]
Consulting Engineer
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

B Chalmers Frazer []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

B C Frazer [1960]
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

J H Frazer [1953]
Ballistic Research Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

William R. Frazer [1986]
Not available
Citation: For contributions to elementary particle theory, including analysis of electromagnetic structure of nucleons which predicted the existence of the rho meson, analysis of multiparticle reactions, and work in perturbative QCD.
Nominated by: DPF

Anna Frebel [2022]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: For pioneering contributions to the study of low-metallicity stars, near-field cosmology, and the r-process in astrophysics.
Nominated by: DAP

Stanley C Freden [1969]
Aerospace Corporation
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Halsey A Frederick [1934]
Bell Telephone Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

H P.R. Frederikse [1958]
National Bureau of Standards
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Hans P R Frederikse [1955]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Eric D Fredrickson [2008]
Princeton University
Citation: For many contributions to the physics of MHD instabilities in tokamaks, including pioneering experimental studies of magnetic reconnection, ballooning modes, resistive instabilities, and fast-ion-driven Alfvén instabilities
Nominated by: DPP

Glenn H. Fredrickson [1998]
University of California, Santa Barbara
Citation: For contributions to the theory of block copolymers and polymer blends.
Nominated by: DPOLY

W R Fredrickson [1953]
Syracuse University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Jack H Freed [1976]
Cornell University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCP

Karl F Freed [1982]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCP

Simon Freed [1950]
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Daniel Z Freedman [1962]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Daniel Z. Freedman [1986]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For important contributions to the development of supersymmetry and supergravity quantum field theory.
Nominated by: DPF

Stuart Jay Freedman [1984]
University of California, Berkeley
Citation: For important studies of weak interactions phenomena in nuclei.
Nominated by: DNP

Wendy Freedman [2011]
Carnegie Institute
Citation: For fundamental contributions in observational cosmology, including the determination of the Hubble constant.
Nominated by: DAP

John W. Freeland [2014]
Argonne National Laboratory
Citation: For development and use of new x-ray techniques to understand chemical, structural, electronic and magnetic features at oxide interfaces.
Nominated by: DCMP

Arthur J Freeman [1963]
Army Materials Research Agency
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Joan M Freeman [1958]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Mark Freeman [2015]
University of Alberta
Citation: For pioneering studies of magnetization dynamics in nanostructures using ultrafast optical spectroscopy, scanning microscopy, and nanomechanical magnetometry.
Nominated by: DCMP

Richard R Freeman [1982]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DAMOP

John Lawrence Freeouf [1990]
Oregon Health Sciences University
Citation: For application of surface-science techniques to the elucidation of semiconductor interfaces and for contributions to the physics of surface barriers.
Nominated by: DCMP

James Knox Freericks [2006]
Georgetown University
Citation: For seminal results in applying dynamical mean-field theory to bulk and multilayered strongly correlated electron systems, significantly advancing our understanding of transport, light scattering, ordered phases and photoemission.
Nominated by: DCMP

Katherine Freese [2009]
University of Michigan
Citation: For pioneering work on the theories of inflation, dark matter, and dark energy.
Nominated by: DGRAV

Jeffrey P Freidberg [1982]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DPP

Dieter Frekers [2016]
Universität Münster
Citation: For experimental work on nuclear matrix elements in double beta decay, and contributions to the field of neutrino-nuclear physics and weak interaction physics by using high-resolution charge-exchange reactions of (3He,t) and (d,2He).
Nominated by: DNP

Johan Frenje [2012]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: For pioneering development of unique neutron diagnostic methods and their utilization in inertial confinement fusion research, particularly in assessing implosion performance in fundamental and applied nuclear-science experiments
Nominated by: DPP

Anatoly I Frenkel [2017]
Stony Brook University and Brookhaven National Laboratory
Citation: For seminal contributions to in situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy, transformative development of structural characterization methods for nanoparticles, and their pioneering applications to a broad range of functional nanomaterials in materials physics and catalysis science.
Nominated by: DMP

J. Frenkel [1930]
Polytechnic Institute of Leningrad
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

F N Frenkiel [1952]
Johns Hopkins University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

R Frerichs [1950]
Northwestern University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

H J Freund [2001]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Hans-Joachim Freund [2001]
Fritz-Haber-Institut
Citation: In recognition of his pioneering study of the structure and dynamics of adsorbates on thin film oxide surfaces and oxide supported metal clusters and their applications in heterogeneous catalysis.
Nominated by: DCP

Henry Philip Freund [1997]
Science Applications International Corporation
Citation: For seminal contributions to the theory of collective radiation mechanisms in plasma and relativistic electron beans, and the application of the theory to runaway electron instabilities in tokamaks and to coherent radiation sources such as Free-Electron Lases and Cerenkov Masers.
Nominated by: DPP

Jonathan Freund [2011]
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Citation: For his pioneering and incisive numerical simulation studies of atomic-scale and biological flows, free shear flow turbulence, and jet aeroacoustics.
Nominated by: DFD

Peter O Freund []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Robert S Freund [1978]
Bell Laboratories
Citation: Also approved by the Division of Chemical Physics.
Nominated by: DAMOP

Raymond Frey [2022]
University of Oregon
Citation: For leadership in several areas leading to gravitational wave detection, including the effects of environmental influences on the LIGO detectors and the searches for gravitational waves associated with astrophysical events, most notably gamma-ray bursts.
Nominated by: DGRAV

James Lewis Friar [1987]
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Citation: For outstanding theoretical work leading to improved understanding of electron and photon interactions with nuclei, of relativistic and mesonic effects in nuclear physics and of the trinuclear system.
Nominated by: DNP

James B Friauf [1931]
A.O. Smith Corporation
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Robert J Friauf [1965]
University of Kansas
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Hugo Fricke [1928]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Martin P. Fricke [1988]
Not available
Citation: For research on the uses of particle beams as weapons, assessment of Soviet weapons technology, and application of physics to weapons development.
Nominated by: FPS

Herbert M Fried [1968]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Laurence E. Fried [2009]
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Citation: In recognition of outstanding contributions to the physics and chemistry of shocked materials, the high pressure, high temperature equations of state of solids and liquids, and the prediction of energetic material reactivity, most notably the existence of sub-picosecond chemistry in high temperature dense fluids.
Nominated by: GCCM

Simeon A Friedberg []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Simeon A Friedberg [1962]
Carnegie Mellon University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Jacques Friedel [1986]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For outstanding contributions to the microscopic description of impurities in metals and the properties of crystals, allows and surfaces.
Nominated by: DCMP

Fritz Josef Friedlaender [1992]
Purdue University
Citation: For contributions to the understanding of magnetization processes , magnetic devices, and device physics.
Nominated by: FIAP

Lazar Friedland [1994]
Racah Institute of Physics, The Hebrew University
Citation: For pioneering work on autoresonant wave interaction, on multi-dimensional mode conversion, on order-reduction in multi-component geometric optics, and for the theory of free electron lasers with guide magnetic field.
Nominated by: FIP

S S Friedland [1957]
New York University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Alex Friedman [1996]
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Citation: For innovations in computer modeling of fusion plasmas, laser-plasma interactions and charged particle beams, and design of high space charge accelerator components.
Nominated by: DCOMP

Daniel J. Friedman [2018]
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Citation: For outstanding contributions in the field of III-V semiconductor physics and multijunction photovoltaic science and groundbreaking work in the materials physics of ordering in III-V alloys and optics and device physics for novel structures and record solar conversion efficiencies.
Nominated by: GERA

F L Friedman [1953]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Harold L Friedman [1976]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Harold Leo Friedman [1987]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For pioneering work in the theory of the statistical mechanics of ionic solutions and in the application of the theory of experimental observables.
Nominated by: DCP

Herbert Friedman [1955]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Herbert Friedman [1955]
National Research Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Jerome I Friedman []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Joel M Friedman [1984]
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Citation: For innovative applications of time resolved Raman spectroscopy to the study of structural dynamics and reactivity in hemeproteins.
Nominated by: DBIO

John L. Friedman [1999]
University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Citation: For fundamental contributions to the theory of rotating stars, to topological aspects of general relativity, and to quantum gravity.
Nominated by: DGRAV

Jonathan R. Friedman [2022]
Amherst College
Citation: For pioneering experimental research elucidating the quantum behavior of molecular nanomagnets and significant contributions to undergraduate physics research and education.
Nominated by: GMAG

William A. Friedman [1989]
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Citation: For many contributions to the understanding of statistical decay products of heavy-ion collisions, especially those involving final-state interactions.
Nominated by: DNP

Edward A Frieman [1962]
Princeton University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Joshua Adam Frieman [1997]
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Citation: In recognition of his many contributions in the application of particle physics to early-universe cosmology.
Nominated by: DAP

A W Friend [1953]
Magnetic Metals Company
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Harry Lloyd Frisch [1964]
Bell Telephone Laboratories
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Henry Jonathan Frisch [1986]
University of Chicago
Citation: For significant contributions to the understanding of production of hadrons at large transverse momentum.
Nominated by: DPF

Otto Frisch [1946]
Washington, D.C.
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Amalie Frischknecht [2012]
Sandia National Laboratories
Citation: For outstanding contributions to the theory of ionomers and nanocomposites including the development and application of density functional theory to polymers
Nominated by: DPOLY

Yitzhak Frishman []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Peter Karl Fritschel [2005]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: For his pioneering achievements in optical metrology at the quantum limit and their application to gravitational wave detection.
Nominated by: DGRAV

Hellmut Fritzsche []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Carla Fröhlich [2022]
North Carolina State University
Citation: For seminal contributions to nuclear and neutrino astrophysics, in particular to the understanding of supernovae, their nucleosynthesis, and the neutrino-p process, and for developing predictive models of supernova messengers.
Nominated by: DNP

Bernard Frois [1981]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Bernard Frois [1991]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For outstanding studies of light and heavy nuclear systems using electron scattering; in particular, for demonstrating the unequivocal need for subnuclear degrees of nuclear degrees of freedom in any complete description of nuclei.
Nominated by: DNP

Valery V. Frolov [2016]
Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory Livingston Observatory
Citation: For his contributions to gravitational-wave physics, in particular the commissioning of the advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory detector that observed GW140914.
Nominated by: DGRAV

Darol Froman [1946]
Los Alamos Science Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Lothar W Frommhold [1971]
University of Texas
Citation: Also approved by the Division of Plasma Physics
Nominated by: DAMOP

Arthur A Frost [1951]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Dustin H. Froula [2017]
University of Rochester Laboratory for Laser Energetics
Citation: For the development and application of Thomson scattering to understand thermal transport and the onset of laser-plasma instabilities in indirect and direct-drive fusion experiments.
Nominated by: DPP

Amnon Fruchtman [1999]
Holon Institute of Technology
Citation: For original theoretical contributions to the phenomenon of fast magnetic field penetration into plasmas due to the Hall field, and to the theory of free electron lasers.
Nominated by: DPP

Edward S. Fry [1997]
Texas A&M University
Citation: For new optical probes and effects ranging from the foundations of quantum mechanics to ocean optics and lasing without inversion.
Nominated by: DAMOP

James Nathan Fry [2005]
University of Florida
Citation: For important contributions to the theory of large-scale cosmological structure, emphasizing nonlinear effects and higher order correlations.
Nominated by: DAP

Thornton C. Fry [1923]
Western Electric Company
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

W F Fry [1953]
University of Wisconsin
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Glenn M Frye [1959]
Los Alamos Science Laboratory
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Chris Fryer [2008]
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Citation: For his leadership in and contributions to theoretical and computational high energy astrophysics through multidimensional simulations that demonstrated the importance of three-dimensional convection and neutrino transport in core-collapse supernovae explosions.
Nominated by: DAP

Bruce Fryxell [2012]
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Citation: For his work disseminating computational methods to the field of astrophysics and applying these methods to a wide range of astrophysics from supernovae to X-ray binaries
Nominated by: DAP

Chong Long Fu [2008]
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Citation: For outstanding contributions to the fundamental understanding of the electronic, magnetic, and structural properties of metallic and intermetallic systems based on accurate first-principles calculations and to the development of novel high temperature intermetallics and nanocluster strengthened alloys for structural applications.
Nominated by: DMP

Guo-yong Fu [2006]
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
Citation: For pioneering contributions to the physics of energetic particle-driven MHD modes in tokamaks and ideal MHD stability in stellarators.
Nominated by: DPP

Liang Fu [2022]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT
Citation: For pioneering contributions to the theory of topological quantum materials.
Nominated by: DCMP

Sergio Fubini [1953]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Sergio Piero Fubini [1991]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For fundamental contributions to the description of scattering processes, dual resonance models, and the algebra of currents.
Nominated by: DPF

Christopher Fuchs [2012]
Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
Citation: For powerful theorems and lucid expositions that have expanded our understanding of quantum foundations, through his illuminating reformulation of the view that quantum states are states of knowledge, merging the Copenhagen interpretation with the interpre- tation of probabilities as degrees of belief
Nominated by: DQI

Ronald Fuchs [1969]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Ronald Fuchs [1969]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: DCMP

Vladimir Fuchs [1977]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Vladimir Fuchs [1990]
Affiliation not available
Citation: For contributions to the theory of parametric instability in finite, inhomogeneous plasmas; the theory of kinetic mode conversion; and the analysis of perpendicular tail temperatures in lower hybrid current drive
Nominated by: DPP

Michael George Fuda [1997]
State University of New York, Buffalo
Citation: For the development of techniques for the analysis of the nonrelativistic and relativistic quantum mechanics of few particle systems, and their applications to strongly interacting few particle systems.
Nominated by: GFB

Michael Fuhrer [2010]
University of Maryland
Citation: For experimental studies of the electronic transport properties of carbon nanotubes and graphene.
Nominated by: DCMP

Kyotuko Fuji [1921]
Imperial University, Tokyo
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

James G. Fujimoto [2001]
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Citation: For pioneering contributions to ultrafast optics and optical coherence tomography.
Nominated by: DLS

Makoto C. Fujiwara [2016]
TRIUMF
Citation: For seminal contributions to antihydrogen studies, and for leadership in developing the ideas and techniques that enabled observations of the production and trapping of antihydrogen.
Nominated by: GPMFC

Mamoru Fujiwara [2009]
Osaka University
Citation: For many and continuing contributions to nuclear physics involving innovative use of high-resolution spectrometers for charge-exchange reactions, and leadership in wide-ranging international collaborations and activities.
Nominated by: FIP

Hidetoshi Fukuyama []

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Harry W Fulbright [1947]
Princeton University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Jose R Fulco [1958]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Everett G Fuller [1958]
Affiliation not available
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

George M. Fuller [1994]
University of California, San Diego
Citation: For work in modern nuclear astrophysics,especially the role of weak interactions in the dynamics of compact objects and in cosmology.
Nominated by: DAP

Gerald G. Fuller [1993]
Stanford University
Citation: For significant contributions in optical rheology to elucidate the characteristics of polymer melts and solutions during flow.
Nominated by: DPOLY

James Fuller [2010]
University of Washington
Citation: In recognition of his pivotal contributions to international arms control, nuclear disarmament, and proliferation prevention and for his leadership in educational outreach.
Nominated by: FPS

Robert G. Fuller [1997]
University of Nebraska
Citation: For his development of video and computer materials for the teaching of physics and his leadership in introducing technology into the teaching of physics.
Nominated by: FED

Eric Edward Fullerton [1998]
IBM Almaden Research Center
Citation: For innovative contributions to understanding the growth, structural characterization, and magnetic properties of metallic thin films and superlattices.
Nominated by: GMAG

Stephen A. Fulling [2018]
Texas A&M University
Citation: For laying foundations for quantum field theory in curved spacetime, and for working to maximize communication between physics and mathematics, and between subfields of each.
Nominated by: DGRAV

T Fulton [1970]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Theodore Alan Fulton [1983]
Alcatel Lucent, Bell Laboratories
Citation: For his contributions to the development of Electron Spectroscopy of Chemical Analysis (ESCA).
Nominated by: DCMP

Brent T Fultz [2017]
Caltech
Citation: For seminal experiments demonstrating the importance of vibrational entropy to the phase stability of materials and transformational leadership in the development of neutron scattering techniques.
Nominated by: DMP

Stanley C Fultz [1966]
University of California
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

F G Fumi [1965]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Fausto G Fumi [1965]
Northwestern University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Stefan Funk [2015]
University Erlangen Nuernberg
Citation: For scientific contributions and effective leadership in high-energy gamma-ray astrophysics.
Nominated by: DAP

Herbert O. Funsten [2016]
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Citation: For pioneering discoveries of the global structure and dynamics of the plasma interaction of the heliosphere with the interstellar medium, and for leadership of the instrumentation that enabled these discoveries.
Nominated by: GPAP

Paul Henry Fuoss [1999]
AT&T Laboratories
Citation: For pioneering contributions to the science of x-ray scattering, including anomalous scattering for amorphous materials, grazing incident scattering to study monolayers on surfaces and in-situ scattering during chemical vapor deposition.
Nominated by: DMP

J K Furdyna [1958]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Miguel Furman [2007]
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Citation: For his pioneering development and application of simulation tools for the beam-beam and electron cloud effects in colliders and storage rings.
Nominated by: DPB

Ivo Furno [2015]
Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne
Citation: For fundamental experimental work involving the physical, statistical, and transport properties of self-organized plasma blobs at the edge of magnetized plasmas.
Nominated by: DPP

Richard J. Furnstahl [2001]
Ohio State University
Citation: For pioneering contributions to the nuclear many-body problem, including developments in relativistic many-body theory, QCD sum roles at finite density, and effective field theory at finite density.
Nominated by: DNP

Wendell H Furry [1936]
Harvard University
Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Dmitry Fursa [2012]
Curtin University
Citation: For the development of the convergent close-coupling method for quasi two-electron targets
Nominated by: DAMOP

Tom Furtak [2010]
Colorado School of Mines
Citation: For contributions to the understanding of surface enhanced Raman scattering.
Nominated by: DCMP

H P Furth [1961]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

J H Futrell [2003]

Citation: Not available
Nominated by: APS

Jean H Futrell [2003]
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Citation: For pioneering contributions to the understanding of dynamics and mechanisms of charge exchange, proton-transfer, condensation and dissociation ion-molecule reactions at low and intermediate collision energy.
Nominated by: DCP

Ibiyinka Fuwape [2022]
Michael and Cecilia Ibru University
Citation: For decades of leadership in the advancement of women in physics in Nigeria and Africa, along with major research contributions solving problems in climate change, agriculture, and finance at the interface of physics and society, thereby benefiting economic development in Africa.
Nominated by: FPS

Richard Maurice Fye [2006]
Sandia National Laboratories
Citation: For the pioneering development and usage of exact quantum Monte Carlo and other methods for studying models of highly correlated electrons.
Nominated by: DCOMP

George Fytas [2004]
Foundation for Research & Technology - Hellas
Citation: For his significant contributions in the dynamics of polymer solutions, blends, block copolymers and soft colloids as well as on the dynamics of amorphous polymers associated with the glass transition.
Nominated by: DPOLY