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The Deborah Jin Award for Outstanding Doctoral Thesis Research in Atomic, Molecular, or Optical Physics is an award presented annually by the American Physical Society Division of Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics (DAMOP) to recent Ph.D. graduates recognizing outstanding doctoral research. The award was initially established in 1992, and renamed in honor of the physicist Deborah Jin in 2016. It was endowed by M Squared Lasers.[1]


Prize Recipients [1]

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  • 2019, Ivan Kozyryev: "For pioneering experimental work on using laser radiation to control and cool the motion of polyatomic molecules."
  • 2018, Rivka Bekenstein: "For her work, “Electromagnetic waves in linear and nonlinear curved space systems.""
  • 2017, Mickey McDonald: "For outstanding contributions to high precision optical spectroscopy and quantum state selected photodissociation of ultracold molecules in an optical lattice."
  • 2016, Adam Kaufman: "Laser cooling atoms to indistinguishability: Atomic Hong-Ou-Mandel interference and entanglement through spin exchange."
  • 2015, Norman Yao: "Topology, Localization, and Quantum Information in Atomic, Molecular and Optical Systems."
  • 2014, Thibault Peyronel: "Quantum Nonlinear Optics using cold atomic ensembles."
  • 2013, Michael Foss-Feig: "Quantum simulation of many-body physics with neutral atoms, molecules, and ions"
  • 2013, Yaroslav Dudin: "Investigations of Memory, Entanglement, and Long-Range Interactions Using Ultra-Cold Atoms"
  • 2012, Waseem Bakr: "Microscopic studies of quantum phase transitions in optical lattices."
  • 2011, Elmar Haller: "A one-dimensional quantum gas with tunable interactions."
  • 2010, Kang-Kuen Ni: "A Quantum Gas of Polar Molecules."
  • 2009, Andrew Ludlow: "The Strontium Optical Lattice Clock: Optical Spectroscopy with sub-Hertz Accuracy."
  • 2009, Javier von Stecher: "Trapped Ultracold Atoms with Tunable Interactions."
  • 2008, David Moehring:
  • 2007, Cindy Regal: "Experimental realization of BCS-BEC crossover physics with a Fermi gas of atoms."
  • 2006, Brian Odom: easurement of the Electron g-Factor in a Sub-Kelvin Cylindrical Cavity."
  • 2005, Ana María Rey: "Ultra-cold bosonic atoms in optical lattices."
  • 2004, James Thompson: "Testing with a Two-Ion Mass Balance"
  • 2004, Markus Greiner: "Quantum phase transition from a superfluid to a Mott insulator in a gas of ultracold atoms."
  • 2003, Daniel Steck: "Quantum Chaos, Transport, and Decoherence in Atom Optics."
  • 2002, Brian DeMarco: "Quantum Degenerate Fermi Gas."
  • 2001, Thomas Weinacht: "Using Feedback for Coherent Control of Quantum Systems."
  • 2000, Dan M. Stamper-Kurn: "Peeking and poking at a new quantum fluid: Studies of gaseous Bose-Einstein condensates in magnetic and optical traps."
  • 1999, Brett Esry: "Many-body effects in Bose-Einstein condensates of dilute atomic gases.
  • 1999, Jens U. Noeckel: "The emission properties of asymmetric dielectric resonators with chaotic ray dynamics."
  • 1998, Christopher S. Wood: "Improved Measurement of Parity Nonconservation in Atomic Cesium and First Measurement of the Nuclear Anapole Moment."
  • 1997, Paul A. Vetter: "For his thesis entitled, 'Precise measurement of parity nonconserving optical rotation in atomic thallium as a test of the electroweak standard model.'"[2]
  • 1997, Barry C. Walker: "For his thesis entitled, 'One- and two-electron ionization of atoms by a strong laser field.'"[2]
  • 1996, Aephraim M. Steinberg:
  • 1995, Brian Lemoff:
  • 1994, Dmitry Budker:
  • 1993, M. A. Kasevich:

References

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  1. ^ a b c The source of all prize citations and winners unless otherwise noted is:"Deborah Jin Award for Outstanding Doctoral Thesis Research in Atomic, Molecular, or Optical Physics". www.aps.org. Retrieved 26 July 2019. Cite error: The named reference "aps_page" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b "Two Young Physicists Receive DAMOP Thesis Award". www.aps.org. Retrieved 26 July 2019.