Blaise Pascal Medal
The Blaise Pascal Medal is a science award given by the European Academy of Sciences . Up to seven medals are awarded each year. The medal has been awarded since 2003, for example in the fields of physics and chemistry, mathematics, geosciences, computer science, biomedicine and engineering.
Award winners
- 2003: Boris Verkhovsky (USA, computer science), Enders Robinson (USA, geosciences), Enzo Tiezzi (Italy, physics and chemistry, for physical chemistry), Jan Balzarini (Belgium, biomedicine, AIDS research), Eric de Clercq (Belgium, Biomedicine, AIDS research)
- 2004: Manuel Cardona (Spain, Germany, in physics, for solid state physics), Emmanuel Floratos (Greece, physics), Lew Kudryawtsew ( Lev Kudryavtsev , Russia, mathematics), Robert Tarjan (USA, computer science), Stan Veprek (Germany, engineering, for nanomaterial research), Erich Windhab (Switzerland, natural sciences, for research in the food industry)
- 2005: Edmund Hlawka (Austria, mathematics), Khalid Aziz (USA, geosciences), Isaak Chalatnikow (Russia, for physics and chemistry, for work in cosmology), Anthony S. Fauci (USA, biomedicine), Marie-Paule Pileni ( France, engineering, for work in nanotechnology), Peter Holland (Great Britain, natural sciences, in zoology)
- 2007: Howard Green (USA, in biology, cultivation of skin cells for transplantation), Frans Carl de Schryver (Belgium, chemistry), Oscar H. Ibarra (USA, computer science), Sven Erik Jørgensen (Denmark, geosciences), Alexander N. Guz (Ukraine, materials science), Edward Layer (Poland, physics, electrical measurement technology of dynamic systems)
- 2008: Bernard Barbara (France, physics), Saverio Cinti (Italy, biomedicine), Willi Jäger (Germany, mathematics), Terence G. Langdon (Great Britain, materials science), Moshe Y. Vardi (USA, computer science), Georges van den Abbeele (Belgium / USA, social sciences),
- 2009: Vincenzo Balzani (Italy, chemistry), Edgardo D. Carosella (France, medicine), Jean Dalibard (France, physics), Claude Debru (France, social sciences), Herbert Gleiter (Germany, materials sciences), Thomas Kailath (USA, computer science ), Pierre-Arnaud Raviart (France, mathematics, for work in mathematical modeling and numerics)
- 2010: Giovanni Bignami (Italy, Astrophysics), Henri Kagan (France, Chemistry), Anthony Kounadis (Greece, Engineering), Martin Schadt (Switzerland, Materials Science), Howard Morris (United Kingdom, Medicine and Life Sciences), David Sherrington (United Kingdom , Physics)
- 2011: Peter Carmeliet (Belgium, medicine and life sciences), Giulio Maier (Italy, engineering), Gordon David Plotkin (United Kingdom, computer science), Helmut Schwarz (Germany, chemistry), Karl Sigmund (Austria, mathematics), Ruslan Valiev (Russia , Materials Science), Peter Zoller (Austria, Physics)
- 2012: Franco Brezzi (Italy, mathematics), Steven Laureys (Belgium, medicine), Mauro Ferrari (Italy / USA, Biomedical Engineering), Charles Joachain (Belgium, physics), Jean-Pierre Sauvage , (France, chemistry), Hans- Joachim Freund (Germany, Materials Science)
- 2013: Benoit Perthame (France, mathematics), Vladimir Torchilin (USA / Russia, biomedicine), Dmitry Klimov (Russia, engineering), Anne L'Huillier (France, physics), Maurizio Prato (Italy, materials science)
- 2014: John Meurig Thomas (United Kingdom, materials science), Daniel Loss (Switzerland, physics), Eberhard Knobloch (Germany, social sciences), Hubert Schmidbauer (Germany, chemistry), Jean-Pierre Gattuso (France, environmental sciences)
- 2015: Herbert Roesky (Germany, chemistry), Corinne Le Quéré (environmental sciences), Christos Zerefos (environmental sciences), Ulrike Diebold (materials sciences), Luis Vega (mathematics), Manuel Garcia Velarde (physics), Martin Carrier (Germany, philosophy)
- 2016: Gianfranco Pacchioni (Italy, chemistry), Ni-Bin Chang (USA, environmental science), Elvira Fortunato (Portugal, materials science)
- 2017: Mike Mingos (United Kingdom, chemistry), Nikita Morosow (Russia, engineering), Francisco J. Ayala (United States, life sciences), Luis Liz-Marzan (Spain, materials science), Felix Otto (Germany, mathematics)
- 2018: Avelino Corma (Spain, chemistry), Carlos M. Duarte (Spain, environmental science), Emmanuel Gdoutos (Greece, engineering), Paolo Samorì (Italy, materials science), Alice Guionnet (France, mathematics), Peter Hänggi (Switzerland, physics )
- 2019: Federico Rosei (materials science), David Milstein (Israel, chemistry), Jean Rossier (medicine / life sciences), Quan Wang (engineering sciences), Luigi Ambrosio (Italy, mathematics)
- 2020: Iain McCulloch (materials science), John Katsikadelis (engineering), Albert Cohen (mathematics), Manfred Reetz (chemistry), Tejinder Singh Virdee (physics)
Web links
- ↑ Blaise Pascal Medals Results 2020. In: eurasc.org. European Academy of Sciences, accessed April 2, 2020 .