Your Ad Here

Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics

The Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics was established in 1959 by the Heineman Foundation for Research, Educational, Charitable, and Scientific Purposes, Inc., and is administered jointly by the American Physical Society and the American Institute of Physics.
The $7,500 prize is awarded  “solely for valuable published contributions made in the field of mathematical physics with no restrictions placed on a candidate's citizenship or country of residence.”


 

WINNERS

2009 Raymond Stora
2009 Igor Tyutin
2009 Alain Rouet and Carlo Becchi
2008 Mitchell Feigenbaum
2007 Juan Maldacena
2007 Joseph Polchinski
2006 Peter van Nieuwenhuizen
2006 Daniel Freedman
2006 Sergio Ferrara
2005 Giorgio Parisi
2004 Gabriele Veneziano
2003 James W. York
2003 Yvonne Choquet-Bruhat
2002 John H. Schwarz
2002 Michael B. Green
2001 Vladimir Igorevich Arnol'd
2000 Sidney R. Coleman
1999 Alexander B. Zamolodchikov
1999 Tai Tsun Wu
1999 Barry M. McCoy
1998 Edward Witten
1998 Nathan Seiberg
1997 Harry W. Lehmann
1996 Roy J. Glauber
1995 Roman W. Jackiw
1994 Charles W. Misner
1994 Stanley Deser
1994 Richard Arnowitt
1993 Martin C. Gutzwiller
1992 Stanley Mandelstam
1991 Jurg Frohlich
1991 Thomas C. Spencer
1990 Yakov Sinai
1989 John S. Bell
1988 Bruno Zumino
1988 Julius Wess
1987 Rodney Baxter
1986 Alexander M. Polyakov
1985 David P. Ruelle
1984 Robert B. Griffiths
1983 Martin D. Kruskal
1982 John Clive Ward
1981 Jeffrey Goldstone
1980 Arthur Jaffe
1979 Gerard 't Hooft
1978 Elliott Lieb
1977 Steven Weinberg
1976 Stephen Hawking
1975 Ludwig D. Faddeev
1974 Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
1973 Kenneth G. Wilson
1972 James D. Bjorken
1971 Roger Penrose
1970 Yoichiro Nambu
1969 Arthur S. Wightman
1968 Sergio Fubini
1967 Gian Carlo Wick
1966 Nikolai N. Bogoliubov
1965 Freeman J. Dyson
1964 Tullio Regge
1963 Keith A. Brueckner
1962 Léon Van Hove
1961 Marvin L. Goldberger
1960 Aage Bohr
1959 Murray Gell-Mann