Each year, the Foresight Institute awards prizes to leaders in research, communication and study in the field of nanotechnology. Prizes are conferred on individuals whose work in research, communication and study are moving society toward the ultimate goal of atomically-precise manufacturing. Here is a report on this year's winners:
The 2007 Foresight Institute Feynman Prizes, named in honor of pioneer physicist Richard Feynman, are given in two categories, one for experimental work and the other for theory in advances in nanotechnology. This year the Theory Prize was won by David Leigh of University of Edinburgh, UK, and the Experimental Prize went to Fraser Stoddart of UCLA.The Foresight Prize in Communication was presented to nanotechnology author and theorist Robert A Freitas Jr. A Rice University graduate student, Fung-Suong Ou, received the Distinguished Student Prize.
“This year’s winning research illustrates the great strides toward productive nanosystems now taking place throughout the world,” said Dr. Pearl Chin, President of Foresight Nanotech Institute. “The goal of manufacturing with atomic precision advances daily, and we can expect even faster progress building on the work being honored today.”
Foresight Institute Feynman Prizes – Experimental and Theory
Winning in the Experimental category for 2007 is J. Fraser Stoddart, Fred Kavli Professor of NanoSystems Sciences, UCLA, and former Director of the California NanoSystems Institute, who has pioneered the synthesis and assembly of unique active molecular machines for manufacturing into practical nanoscale devices. His many accomplishments in synthetic chemistry have produced functional molecular machines, in particular a ‘molecular muscle’ for the purposes of amplifying and harnessing molecular mechanical motions, that may ultimately lead to the construction of atomically-precise products through the use of molecular machine systems.
This year’s winner in the Theory category, David A. Leigh of University of Edinburgh, is the world’s foremost pioneer on the design and synthesis of artificial molecular motors and machines from first principles and one of the most dynamic and innovative chemists of his generation, focusing on the construction of molecular machine systems that function in the realm of Brownian motion. Leigh’s theoretical studies of synthetic molecular motors and machines contribute an important element toward the development of molecular machine systems capable of atomically-precise fabrication.
Foresight Institute Prize in Communication
The 2007 Communication prizewinner — Robert A. Freitas Jr., a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Molecular Manufacturing — is best known for Nanomedicine, the definitive book on the medical applications of molecular nanotechnology and available in its entirety at www.nanomedicine.com; and Kinematic Self-Replicating Machines, the foundational description of system architectures for molecular nanotechnology, available at www.molecularassembler.com. With almost 100 technical papers, book chapters, or popular articles he is one of the most prolific authors in the field of molecular nanotechnology.
Foresight Institute Distinguished Student Prize
Fung Suong Ou is a Ph.D. candidate now at Rice University who has demonstrated that it is possible to use a combinatorial approach to build nanowires from dissimilar components. Specifically, he has fabricated multi-segmented one-dimensional hybrid structures composed of carbon nanotubes and metal nanowires.
Congratulations to all the winners!
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I was searching blogs for information on Richnard Feynman and came across this page. I never knew there was an award named in honor of Feynman.
Congratulations to this year's winnerers.
Posted by: Jensen | December 19, 2007 at 09:51 AM