I. I. Rabi Award
The I. I. Rabi Award, founded in 1983, is awarded annually by IEEE.
- "The Rabi Award is to recognize outstanding contributions related to the fields of atomic and molecular frequency standards, and time transfer and dissemination."[1]
The award is named after Isidor Isaac Rabi, Nobel Prize winner in 1944. He was the first recipient of the award, for his experimental and theoretical work on atomic beam resonance spectroscopy.[1]
Recipients
- 1983 - I. I. Rabi
- 1984 - David W. Allan
- 1986 - Jerrold R. Zacharias
- 1987 - Louis Essen
- 1988 - Gernot M. R. Winkler
- 1989 - Leonard S. Cutler
- 1985 - Norman Ramsey, Nobel Prize in 1989
- 1990 - Claude Audoin
- 1991 - Andrea DeMarchi
- 1992 - James A. Barnes
- 1993 - Robert F. C. Vessot
- 1994 - Jacques Vanier
- 1995 - Fred L. Walls
- 1996 - Andre Clairon and Robert E. Drullinger
- 1997 - Harry E. Peters and Nikolai A. Demidov
- 1999 - Bernard Guinot
- 2000 - William J. Riley Jr.
- 2001 - Lute Maleki
- 2002 - Jon H. Shirley
- 2003 - Andreas Bauch
- 2005 - Theodor W. Hänsch, Nobel Prize in 2005
- 2004 - John L. Hall, Nobel Prize in 2005
- 2006 - James C. Bergquist
- 2007 - Patrick Gill and Leo Hollberg
- 2008 - Hidetoshi Katori
- 2009 - John D. Prestage
- 2010 - Long Sheng Ma
- 2011 - Fritz Riehle
- 1998 - David J. Wineland, Nobel Prize in 2012
- 2012 - James Camparo
- 2013 - Judah Levine
- 2014 - Harald R. Telle
- 2015 - Ulrich L. Rohde
References
- 1 2 Rabi Award. IEEE Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control Society. Accessed September 2014.
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