J. J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics | |
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Awarded for | outstanding achievement in particle theory |
Country | United States |
Presented by | American Physical Society |
First awarded | 1984 |
Website | www |
The J. J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics, is presented by the American Physical Society at its annual April Meeting, and honors outstanding achievement in particle physics theory. The prize consists of a monetary award (US$10,000), a certificate citing the contributions recognized by the award, and a travel allowance for the recipient to attend the presentation. The award is endowed by the family and friends of particle physicist J. J. Sakurai. The prize has been awarded annually since 1985. [1]
The following have won this prize: [2]
Year | Recipients | Description |
---|---|---|
1985 | Toshihide Maskawa | For their contributions to the theory of electroweak interactions through their general formulation of fermion mass matrix and their prescient inference of the existence of more than four flavors of quarks |
Makoto Kobayashi | ||
1986 | David Gross | For their analyses of nonabelian gauge theories at short distances, and the implications of these insights for the understanding of the strong interaction between quarks" |
H. David Politzer | ||
Frank Wilczek | ||
1987 | Luciano Maiani | For their work on the weak interactions of charmed particles, a crucial step in the development of the modern theory of the fundamental interactions |
John Iliopoulos | ||
1988 | Stephen L. Adler | For his work in elucidating the consequences of chiral symmetry through sum rules and low energy theorems |
1989 | Nicola Cabibbo | For his outstanding contribution in elucidating the structure of the hadronic weak current |
1990 | Toichiro Kinoshita | For his theoretical contributions to precision tests of quantum electrodynamics and the electroweak theory, especially his pioneering work on the computation of the lepton anomalous magnetic moments |
1991 | Vladimir Gribov | For his early pioneering work on the high energy behavior of quantum field theories and his elucidating studies of the global structure of non-abelian gauge theories |
1992 | Lincoln Wolfenstein | For his many contributions to the theory of weak interactions, particularly CP violation and the properties of neutrinos |
1993 | Mary K. Gaillard | For contributions to particle physics phenomenology and theory, and in particular for her work with Ben Lee and others applying QCD to K meson mixing and decays and to the bound states of charmed quarks |
1994 | Yoichiro Nambu | For his many fundamental contributions to field theory and particle physics, including the understanding of the pion as the signaler of spontaneous breaking of chiral symmetry |
1995 | Howard Georgi | For his pioneering contributions toward the unification of strong and electroweak interactions, and for his application of quantum chromodynamics to the properties and interactions of hadrons |
1996 | William A. Bardeen | For fundamental insights into the structure and meaning of the axial anomaly and for contributions to the understanding of perturbative quantum chromodynamics |
1997 | Thomas Appelquist | For his pioneering work on charmonium and on the de-coupling of heavy particles |
1998 | Leonard Susskind | For his pioneering contributions to hadronic string models, lattice gauge theories, quantum chromodynamics, and dynamical symmetry breaking |
1999 | Mikhail Shifman | For fundamental contributions to the understanding of non-perturbative QCD, non-leptonic weak decays, and the analytic properties of supersymmetric gauge theories |
Arkady Vainshtein | ||
Valentin Zakharov | ||
2000 | Curtis Callan | For his classic formulation of the renormalization group, his contributions to instanton physics and to the theory of monopoles and strings |
2001 | Nathan Isgur | For the construction of the heavy quark mass expansion and the discovery of the heavy quark symmetry in quantum chromodynamics, which led to a quantitative theory of the decays of c and b flavored hadrons |
Mikhail Voloshin | ||
Mark Wise | ||
2002 | William Marciano | For their pioneering work on radiative corrections, which made precision electroweak studies a powerful method of probing the Standard Model and searching for new physics |
Alberto Sirlin | ||
2003 | Alfred Mueller | For developing concepts and techniques in QCD, such as infrared safety and factorization in hard processes, which permitted precise quantitative predictions and experimental tests, and thereby helped to establish QCD as the theory of the strong interactions |
George Sterman | ||
2004 | Ikaros Bigi | For pioneering theoretical insights that pointed the way to the very fruitful experimental study of CP violation in B decays, and for continuing contributions to the fields of CP and heavy flavor physics |
Anthony Ichiro Sanda | ||
2005 | Susumu Okubo | For groundbreaking investigations into the pattern of hadronic masses and decay rates, which provided essential clues into the development of the quark model, and for demonstrating that CP violation permits partial decay rate asymmetries |
2006 | Savas Dimopoulos | For his creative ideas on dynamical symmetry breaking, supersymmetry, and extra spatial dimensions, which have shaped theoretical research on TeV-scale physics, thereby inspiring a wide range of experiments |
2007 | Stanley Brodsky | For applications of perturbative quantum field theory to critical questions of elementary particle physics, in particular, to the analysis of hard exclusive strong interaction processes |
2008 | Alexei Smirnov | For pioneering and influential work on the enhancement of neutrino oscillations in matter, which is essential to a quantitative understanding of the solar neutrino flux |
Stanislav Mikheyev | ||
2009 | Davison E. Soper, John C. Collins and R. Keith Ellis | For work in perturbative quantum chromodynamics, including applications to problems pivotal to the interpretation of high energy particle collisions |
2010 | Gerald Guralnik | For elucidation of the properties of spontaneous symmetry breaking in four-dimensional relativistic gauge theory and of the mechanism for the consistent generation of vector boson masses. |
C. R. Hagen | ||
Tom Kibble | ||
Robert Brout | ||
Francois Englert | ||
Peter Higgs | ||
2011 | Chris Quigg | For their work, separately and collectively, to chart a course of the exploration of TeV scale physics using multi-TeV hadron colliders. |
Estia Eichten | ||
Ian Hinchliffe | ||
Kenneth Lane | ||
2012 | Guido Altarelli | For key ideas leading to the detailed confirmation of the Standard Model of particle physics, enabling high energy experiments to extract precise information about Quantum Chromodynamics, electroweak interactions and possible new physics. |
Torbjörn Sjöstrand | ||
Bryan Webber | ||
2013 | Helen Quinn | For their proposal of the elegant mechanism to resolve the famous problem of strong-CP violation which, in turn, led to the invention of axions, a subject of intense experimental and theoretical investigation for more than three decades. |
Roberto Peccei | ||
2014 | Zvi Bern | For pathbreaking contributions to the calculation of perturbative scattering amplitudes, which led to a deeper understanding of quantum field theory and to powerful new tools for computing QCD processes. |
Lance J. Dixon | ||
David Kosower | ||
2015 | George Zweig | For his independent proposal that hadrons are composed of fractionally charged fundamental constituents, called quarks or aces, and for developing its revolutionary implications for hadron masses and properties. |
2016 | G. Peter Lepage | For inventive applications of quantum field theory to particle physics, particularly in establishing the theory of hadronic exclusive processes, developing nonrelativistic effective field theories, and determining standard-model parameters with lattice gauge theory. |
2017 | Gordon L. Kane | For instrumental contributions to the theory of the properties, reactions, and signatures of the Higgs boson. |
Howard E. Haber | ||
Jack F. Gunion | ||
Sally Dawson | ||
2018 | Ann Nelson | For groundbreaking explorations of physics beyond the Standard Model of particle physics, including their seminal joint work on dynamical super-symmetry breaking, and for their innovative contributions to a broad range of topics, including new models of electroweak symmetry breaking, baryogenesis, and solutions to the strong charge parity problem. |
Michael Dine | ||
2019 | Lisa Randall | For creative contributions to physics beyond the Standard Model, in particular the discovery that warped extra dimensions of space can solve the hierarchy puzzle, which has had a tremendous impact on searches at the Large Hadron Collider. |
Raman Sundrum | ||
2020 | Pierre Sikivie | For seminal work recognizing the potential visibility of the invisible axion, devising novel methods to detect it, and for theoretical investigations of its cosmological implications. |
2021 | Vernon Barger | For pioneering work in collider physics contributing to the discovery and characterization of the W boson, top quark, and Higgs boson, and for the development of incisive strategies to test theoretical ideas with experiments. |
2022 | Nima Arkani-Hamed | For the development of transformative new frameworks for physics beyond the standard model with novel experimental signatures, including work on large extra dimensions, the little Higgs, and more generally for new ideas connected to the origin of the electroweak scale. |
2023 | Heinrich Leutwyler: | For fundamental contributions to the effective field theory of pions at low energies, and for proposing that the gluon is a color octet. |
2024 | Andrzej Buras | For exceptional contributions to quark-flavor physics, in particular, developing and carrying out calculations of higher-order QCD effects to electroweak transitions, as well as for drawing phenomenological connections between kaons, D mesons, and B mesons. |
Peter Ware Higgs was a British theoretical physicist, professor at the University of Edinburgh, and Nobel laureate in Physics for his work on the mass of subatomic particles.
In the Standard Model of particle physics, the Higgs mechanism is essential to explain the generation mechanism of the property "mass" for gauge bosons. Without the Higgs mechanism, all bosons (one of the two classes of particles, the other being fermions) would be considered massless, but measurements show that the W+, W−, and Z0 bosons actually have relatively large masses of around 80 GeV/c2. The Higgs field resolves this conundrum. The simplest description of the mechanism adds a quantum field (the Higgs field) which permeates all of space to the Standard Model. Below some extremely high temperature, the field causes spontaneous symmetry breaking during interactions. The breaking of symmetry triggers the Higgs mechanism, causing the bosons it interacts with to have mass. In the Standard Model, the phrase "Higgs mechanism" refers specifically to the generation of masses for the W±, and Z weak gauge bosons through electroweak symmetry breaking. The Large Hadron Collider at CERN announced results consistent with the Higgs particle on 14 March 2013, making it extremely likely that the field, or one like it, exists, and explaining how the Higgs mechanism takes place in nature. The view of the Higgs mechanism as involving spontaneous symmetry breaking of a gauge symmetry is technically incorrect since by Elitzur's theorem gauge symmetries can never be spontaneously broken. Rather, the Fröhlich–Morchio–Strocchi mechanism reformulates the Higgs mechanism in an entirely gauge invariant way, generally leading to the same results.
Lisa Randall is an American theoretical physicist and Frank B. Baird, Jr. Professor of Science at Harvard University. Her research includes the fundamental forces of nature and dimensions of space. She studies the Standard Model, supersymmetry, possible solutions to the hierarchy problem concerning the relative weakness of gravity, cosmology of dimensions, baryogenesis, cosmological inflation, and dark matter. She contributed to the Randall–Sundrum model, first published in 1999 with Raman Sundrum.
Yoichiro Nambu was a Japanese-American physicist and professor at the University of Chicago.
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Robert Brout was a Belgian-American theoretical physicist who made significant contributions in elementary particle physics. He was a professor of physics at Université Libre de Bruxelles where he had created, together with François Englert, the Service de Physique Théorique.
Chris Quigg is an American theoretical physicist at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab). He graduated from Yale University in 1966 and received his Ph.D. in 1970 under the tutelage of J. D. Jackson at the University of California, Berkeley. He has been an associate professor at the Institute for Theoretical Physics, State University of New York, Stony Brook, and was head of the Theoretical Physics Department at Fermilab from 1977 to 1987.
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