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The '''Hannes Alfvén Prize''' is a prize established by the [[European Physical Society]] (EPS) Plasma Physics Division in 2000. The Prize is awarded annually by the European Physical Society at the [[EPS Conference on Plasma Physics]] for outstanding work in the field of [[plasma physics]]: "for achievements which have shaped the plasma physics field or are expected to do so in future."<ref>[http://plasma.ciemat.es/eps/awards/alfven-prize "European Physical Society Plasma Physics Division Hannes Alfvén Prize"] The Plasma Physics Division of EPS</ref>
The '''Hannes Alfvén Prize''' is a prize established by the [[European Physical Society]] (EPS) Plasma Physics Division in 2000. The Prize is awarded annually by the European Physical Society at the EPS Conference on Plasma Physics for outstanding work in the field of [[plasma physics]]: "for achievements which have shaped the plasma physics field or are expected to do so in future."<ref>[http://plasma.ciemat.es/eps/awards/alfven-prize "European Physical Society Plasma Physics Division Hannes Alfvén Prize"] The Plasma Physics Division of EPS</ref>


It is named after the Swedish physicist [[Hannes Alfvén]].
It is named after the Swedish physicist [[Hannes Alfvén]].


==List of winners==
==List of winners==
Source: [http://plasma.ciemat.es/eps/awards/alfven-prize/ European Physical Society Plasma Physics Division]
*2000: [[Radu Bălescu]]
*2000: [[Radu Bălescu]]
*2001: [[Vitaly Shafranov]]
*2001: [[Vitaly Shafranov]]
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*2014: {{Interlanguage link multi|Patrick Mora|de}} of [[Ecole Polytechnique]]<ref>{{cite journal| title=41st European Physical Society Conference on Plasma Physics| journal=[[Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion]]| publisher=[[IOP Publishing]]| issue=57 (2015)| url=http://iopscience.iop.org/0741-3335/57/1/010301/pdf/0741-3335_57_1_010301.pdf | format=pdf (585kb) }}</ref><ref name=EPS-PPD-report-2014>{{cite web| title=Report from the EPS Plasma Physics Division: Prizes| url=http://plasma.ciemat.es/eps/files/2014/08/EPS_PPD_report_2014.pdf| website=EPS Plasma Physics Division Annual Reports| publisher=[[European Physical Society (EPS)]]| format=PDF (48KB)| date=June 2014| quote=The 2014 Hannes Alfvén Prize is awarded to Patrick Mora (Centre de Physique Théorique, Palaiseau, FR) “for decisive results in the field of laser-produced plasma physics, in particular for illuminating descriptions of laser light absorption in plasmas, electron heat transport in steep temperature gradients and plasma expansion dynamics into vacuum”.}}</ref>
*2014: {{Interlanguage link multi|Patrick Mora|de}} of [[Ecole Polytechnique]]<ref>{{cite journal| title=41st European Physical Society Conference on Plasma Physics| journal=[[Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion]]| publisher=[[IOP Publishing]]| issue=57 (2015)| url=http://iopscience.iop.org/0741-3335/57/1/010301/pdf/0741-3335_57_1_010301.pdf | format=pdf (585kb) }}</ref><ref name=EPS-PPD-report-2014>{{cite web| title=Report from the EPS Plasma Physics Division: Prizes| url=http://plasma.ciemat.es/eps/files/2014/08/EPS_PPD_report_2014.pdf| website=EPS Plasma Physics Division Annual Reports| publisher=[[European Physical Society (EPS)]]| format=PDF (48KB)| date=June 2014| quote=The 2014 Hannes Alfvén Prize is awarded to Patrick Mora (Centre de Physique Théorique, Palaiseau, FR) “for decisive results in the field of laser-produced plasma physics, in particular for illuminating descriptions of laser light absorption in plasmas, electron heat transport in steep temperature gradients and plasma expansion dynamics into vacuum”.}}</ref>
*2015: {{Interlanguage link multi|Nathaniel Fisch|de|lt=Nathaniel J. Fisch}} of [[Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory]]<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.pppl.gov/news/2015/03/nat-fisch-wins-europes-alfv%C3%A9n-prize| title=Nat Fisch wins the 2015 Hannes Alfvén Prize from the European Physical Society (EPS) |publisher=[[Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory]] }}</ref><ref name=EPS-PPD-report-2015>{{cite web| title=Report from the EPS Plasma Physics Division: Prizes| url=http://plasma.ciemat.es/eps/files/2015/05/EPS_PPD_report_2015.pdf| website=EPS Plasma Physics Division Annual Reports| publisher=[[European Physical Society (EPS)]]| format=PDF (195KB)| date=June 2015| quote=The 2015 Hannes Alfvén Prize is awarded to Nathaniel Fisch (Princeton University, USA) “for fundamental studies of wave‐particle interactions, thereby predicting new plasma phenomena, including ways of driving currents efficiently with radio‐frequency waves”.}}</ref>
*2015: {{Interlanguage link multi|Nathaniel Fisch|de|lt=Nathaniel J. Fisch}} of [[Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory]]<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.pppl.gov/news/2015/03/nat-fisch-wins-europes-alfv%C3%A9n-prize| title=Nat Fisch wins the 2015 Hannes Alfvén Prize from the European Physical Society (EPS) |publisher=[[Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory]] }}</ref><ref name=EPS-PPD-report-2015>{{cite web| title=Report from the EPS Plasma Physics Division: Prizes| url=http://plasma.ciemat.es/eps/files/2015/05/EPS_PPD_report_2015.pdf| website=EPS Plasma Physics Division Annual Reports| publisher=[[European Physical Society (EPS)]]| format=PDF (195KB)| date=June 2015| quote=The 2015 Hannes Alfvén Prize is awarded to Nathaniel Fisch (Princeton University, USA) “for fundamental studies of wave‐particle interactions, thereby predicting new plasma phenomena, including ways of driving currents efficiently with radio‐frequency waves”.}}</ref>
*2016 [[Sergei Bulanov]] (National Institute for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology, Japan, and A.M. Prokhorov Institute of General Physics of Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia) and [[Hartmut Zohm]] (Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics, Germany)

==See also==
* [[List of prizes, medals and awards]]
* [[List of prizes named after people]]


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:Awards of the European Physical Society]]
[[Category:Awards of the European Physical Society]]
[[Category:Plasma physics]]
[[Category:Plasma physics]]
[[Category:Awards established in 2000]]

Revision as of 12:17, 6 April 2017

The Hannes Alfvén Prize is a prize established by the European Physical Society (EPS) Plasma Physics Division in 2000. The Prize is awarded annually by the European Physical Society at the EPS Conference on Plasma Physics for outstanding work in the field of plasma physics: "for achievements which have shaped the plasma physics field or are expected to do so in future."[1]

It is named after the Swedish physicist Hannes Alfvén.

List of winners

Source: European Physical Society Plasma Physics Division

See also

References

  1. ^ "European Physical Society Plasma Physics Division Hannes Alfvén Prize" The Plasma Physics Division of EPS
  2. ^ "41st European Physical Society Conference on Plasma Physics" (pdf (585kb)). Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion (57 (2015)). IOP Publishing.
  3. ^ "Report from the EPS Plasma Physics Division: Prizes" (PDF (48KB)). EPS Plasma Physics Division Annual Reports. European Physical Society (EPS). June 2014. The 2014 Hannes Alfvén Prize is awarded to Patrick Mora (Centre de Physique Théorique, Palaiseau, FR) "for decisive results in the field of laser-produced plasma physics, in particular for illuminating descriptions of laser light absorption in plasmas, electron heat transport in steep temperature gradients and plasma expansion dynamics into vacuum".
  4. ^ "Nat Fisch wins the 2015 Hannes Alfvén Prize from the European Physical Society (EPS)". Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory.
  5. ^ "Report from the EPS Plasma Physics Division: Prizes" (PDF (195KB)). EPS Plasma Physics Division Annual Reports. European Physical Society (EPS). June 2015. The 2015 Hannes Alfvén Prize is awarded to Nathaniel Fisch (Princeton University, USA) "for fundamental studies of wave‐particle interactions, thereby predicting new plasma phenomena, including ways of driving currents efficiently with radio‐frequency waves".