Kavli Prize

The Kavli Prize was established in 2005 through a joint venture between the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, the Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research, and The Kavli Foundation. The main objective for the Prize is to honor, support and recognize scientists for outstanding scientific work in the fields of astrophysicsnanoscience and neuroscience and award three international prizes every second year. The Kavli Prize was awarded for the first time on 9 September 2008 in Oslo. The Prizes were presented by Haakon, Crown Prince of Norway. Each of the three Kavli Prizes consists of a gold medal, a scroll, and a cash award of US$1,000,000.

The Kavli Prize
The 2014 Astrophysics laureates shortly after being presented with their awards
Awarded forAwarded for outstanding contributions in AstrophysicsNanoscience, and Neuroscience.
CountryNorway
Presented by
  • Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters
  • The Kavli Foundation
  • Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research
Reward(s)A gold medal, a scroll, and a monetary award of US$1,000,000
First awarded2008
Number of laureates21 prizes to 54 laureates (as of 2021)
Websitehttp://www.kavliprize.no

Selection committeesEdit

The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters appoints the three Prize Committees consisting of leading international scientists after receiving recommendations made by the following international academies and equivalent scientific organisations:

  • The Chinese Academy of Sciences
  • The French Academy of Sciences
  • The Max Planck Society (Germany)
  • The National Academy of Sciences (US)
  • The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters
  • The Royal Society (UK)

These distinguished panels of international scientists review and recommend the prize winners on the basis of a nomination process. The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters administer the selection process and announce the prize winners.

LaureatesEdit

AstrophysicsEdit

YearLaureateInstitutionCountryCitation
2008Maarten SchmidtCalifornia Institute of TechnologyNetherlands"for their seminal contributions to understanding the nature of quasars"
Donald Lynden-Bell.jpgDonald Lynden-BellCambridge UniversityUnited Kingdom
2010Jerry E. NelsonLick ObservatoryUniversity of California, Santa CruzUnited States"for their contributions to the development of giant telescopes"
Raymond N. WilsonEuropean Southern ObservatoryGarchingUnited Kingdom
James Roger AngelSteward ObservatoryUniversity of ArizonaUnited States
2012David Jewitt.jpgDavid C. JewittUniversity of California Los AngelesUnited Kingdom United States"for discovering and characterizing the Kuiper Belt and its largest members, work that led to a major advance in the understanding of the history of our planetary system"
JaneLuu.pngJane X. LuuLincoln LaboratoryMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyVietnam United States
Michael E Brown 1.jpgMichael E. BrownCalifornia Institute of TechnologyUnited States
2014AlanGuthCambridge.jpgAlan H. GuthMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyUnited States"for pioneering the theory of cosmic inflation"
Andrei Linde.jpgAndrei D. LindeStanford UniversityRussia United States
Alexei A. StarobinskyLandau Institute for Theoretical PhysicsRussia
2016Ronald Drever Glasgow 2007.jpgRonald W.P. DreverCalifornia Institute of TechnologyUnited Kingdom"for the direct detection of gravitational waves"[1]
Kip Thorne at Caltech.jpgKip S. ThorneCalifornia Institute of TechnologyUnited States
Rainer Weiss - December 2006.jpgRainer WeissMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyGermany United States
2018EwineVanDishoeck.jpgEwine van DishoeckLeiden UniversityNetherlands"for her combined contributions to observational, theoretical, and laboratory astrochemistry, elucidating the life cycle of interstellar clouds and the formation of stars and planets"[2][3]
2020Andrew FabianUniversity of CambridgeUnited Kingdom"for his groundbreaking research in the field of observational X-ray astronomy, covering a wide range of topics from gas flows in clusters of galaxies to supermassive black holes at the heart of galaxies"[4]

NanoscienceEdit

YearLaureateInstitutionCountryCitation
2008Louis BrusColumbia UniversityUnited States"for their large impact in the development of the nanoscience field of the zero and one dimensional nanostructures in physics, chemistry and biology"
Iijima.jpgSumio IijimaMeijo UniversityJapan
2010Don Eigler Neon Argon.jpgDonald EiglerIBM Almaden Research CenterSan JoseUnited States"for their development of unprecedented methods to control matter on the nanoscale"
Nadrian Seeman.jpgNadrian C. SeemanNew York UniversityUnited States
2012Barack Obama greets Burton Richter and Mildred Dresselhaus (cropped).jpgMildred S. DresselhausMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyUnited States"for her pioneering contributions to the study of phonons, electron-phonon interactions, and thermal transport in nanostructures"
2014Thomas Ebbesen 2014.jpgThomas W. EbbesenUniversity of StrasbourgNorway France"for transformative contributions to the field of nano-optics that have broken long-held beliefs about the limitations of the resolution limits of optical microscopy and imaging"
Stefan W Hell.jpgStefan W. HellMax Planck Institute for Biophysical ChemistryGermany
John Pendry 2014c.jpgJohn B. PendryImperial College LondonUnited Kingdom
2016Gerd Binnig sw.jpgGerd BinnigIBM Zurich Research LaboratoryGermany"for the invention and realization of atomic force microscopy, a breakthrough in measurement technology and nanosculpting that continues to have a transformative impact on nanoscience and technology"[5]
Christoph Gerber 2013.jpgChristoph GerberUniversity of BaselSwitzerland
Calvin QuateStanford UniversityUnited States
2018Emmanuelle Charpentier.jpgEmmanuelle CharpentierMax Planck Institute for Infection BiologyGermany France"for the invention of CRISPR-Cas9, a precise nanotool for editing DNA, causing a revolution in biologyagriculture, and medicine"[6][3]
Professor Jennifer Doudna ForMemRS.jpgJennifer DoudnaUniversity of California, BerkeleyUnited States
VSiksnys.jpgVirginijus ŠikšnysVilnius UniversityLithuania
2020Harald Rose Dresden 2009-2.jpgHarald RoseUniversität UlmGermany“for sub-ångström resolution imaging and chemical analysis using electron beams”[7]
Maximilian HaiderCEOS GmbHAustria
Knut UrbanForschungszentrum JülichGermany
Ondrej L Krivanek outside London 2020.pngOndrej KrivanekNion CoUnited Kingdom Czech Republic

NeuroscienceEdit

YearLaureateInstitutionCountryCitation
2008Sten GrillnerKarolinska InstituteSweden"for discoveries on the developmental and functional logic of neuronal circuits"
Thomas JessellColumbia UniversityUnited Kingdom United States
Professor Pasko Rakic ForMemRS.jpgPasko RakicYale University School of MedicineSerbia United States
2010Richard H. SchellerGenentechSouth San FranciscoCaliforniaUnited States"for discovering the molecular basis of neurotransmitter release"
Thomas c südhof.jpgThomas C. SüdhofStanford University School of MedicineGermany
James E. RothmanYale UniversityUnited States
2012Cornelia Isabella BargmannRockefeller UniversityUnited States"for elucidating basic neuronal mechanisms underlying perception and decision"
Winfried DenkMax Planck Institute for Medical ResearchGermany
Ann Graybiel 2001.jpgAnn M. GraybielMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyUnited States
2014Brenda Milner.jpgBrenda MilnerMontreal Neurological InstituteMcGill UniversityCanada"for the discovery of specialized brain networks for memory and cognition"
John O'Keefe (neuroscientist) 2014.jpgJohn O’KeefeUniversity College LondonUnited Kingdom
M.Raichle w PET3.jpgMarcus E. RaichleWashington UniversitySt.LouisUnited States
2016Eve Marder.jpgEve MarderBrandeis UniversityUnited States"for the discovery of mechanisms that allow experience and neural activity to remodel brain function"[8]
Michael M. MerzenichUniversity of California, San FranciscoUnited States
Carla shatz.jpgCarla J. ShatzStanford UniversityUnited States
2018A. James HudspethRockefeller UniversityUnited States"for their scientific discoveries of the molecular and neural mechanisms of hearing"[9][3]
Robert FettiplaceUniversity of Wisconsin–MadisonUnited Kingdom United States
Christine PetitCollège de FranceFrance
2020Davidjuliuswithsnake.jpgDavid JuliusUniversity of California, San FranciscoUnited States“for their transformative discovery of receptors for temperature and pressure”.[10]
Ardem PatapoutianScripps Research and Howard Hughes Medical InvestigatorLebanon United States


This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.