EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Physics Prize
Appearance
The EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Physics Prize is a biannual award by the European Physical Society (EPS) given since 2017. Its aim is to recognize outstanding research contributions in the area of statistical physics, nonlinear physics, complex systems, and complex networks.[1][2]
Senior Recipients
Year | Name | Institution | Citation |
---|---|---|---|
2017 | Peter Grassberger | University of Calgary | For their seminal contributions to nonlinear physics, in particular for introducing the correlation dimension as a measure of the fractal dimension of strange attractors and studies of other complex phenomena.[3] |
Itamar Procaccia | Weizmann Institute | ||
2019 | Stefano Cliberto | ENS Lyon | for his seminal contributions over a wide range of problems in statistical and nonlinear physics, in particular for performing groundbreaking new experiments testing Fluc- tuation Theorems for injected power, dissipated heat, and entropy production rates, as well as investigating experimentally the connection between dissipated heat and the Landauer bound, thus demonstrating a link between information theory and thermodynamics.[4] |
Satya Majumdar | CNRS Univerisity Paris-Sud | for his seminal contributions to non-equilibrium statistical physics, stochastic processes, and random matrix theory, in particular for his groundbreaking research on Abelian sandpiles, persistence statistics, force fluctuations in bead packs, large deviations of eigenvalues of random matrices, and applying the results to cold atoms and other physical systems. [5] |
References
- ^ "European Physical Society (EPS)". European Physical Society. Retrieved 2017-07-14.
- ^ "The EPS Statistical and Nonlinear Division is happy to announce the winners of its two 2017 prizes". European Physical Society. Retrieved 2017-12-31.
- ^ "SNPD Prizes 2017" (PDF). European Physical Society. Retrieved 2017-12-31.
- ^ "SNPD Prizes 2019" (PDF). European Physical Society.
- ^ "SNPD Prizes 2019" (PDF). European Physical Society.