Ashoke Sen, a graduate from IIT Kanpur has received the Fundamental Physics Prize. Posting it on my blog so that I can redirect people to this post, who say, why don't IITians win anything in the Science domain.
Physicists are rarely wealthy or famous, but a new prize rewarding research at the field’s cutting edges has made nine of them instant multimillionaires.
The nine are recipients of the Fundamental Physics Prize, established by
Yuri Milner, a Russian physics student who dropped out of graduate
school in 1989 and later earned billions investing in Internet companies
like Facebook and Groupon.
Reblogged via NY Times
Physicists are rarely wealthy or famous, but a new prize rewarding research at the field’s cutting edges has made nine of them instant multimillionaires.
“It knocked me off my feet,” said Alan H. Guth,
a professor of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who
was among the winners. He came up with the idea of cosmic inflation,
that there was a period of extremely rapid expansion in the first
instant of the universe.
When he was told of the $3 million prize, he assumed that the money
would be shared among the winners. Not so: Instead, each of this year’s
nine recipients will receive $3 million, the most lucrative academic
prize in the world. The Nobel Prize
currently comes with an award of $1.2 million, usually split by two or
three people. The Templeton Prize, which honors contributions to
understanding spiritual dimensions of life, has been the largest
monetary award given to an individual, $1.7 million this year.
The $3 million has already appeared in Dr. Guth’s bank account, one that
had had a balance of $200. “Suddenly, it said, $3,000,200,” he said.
“The bank charged a $12 wire transfer fee, but that was easily
affordable.”
Mr. Milner said that he wanted to recognize advances in delving into the
deepest mysteries of physics and the universe. “This intellectual quest
to understand the universe really defines us as human beings,” he said.
Four of the physicists work at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J.: Nima Arkani-Hamed, Juan Maldacena, Nathan Seiberg and Edward Witten.
They work on theories trying to tie together the basic particles and
forces of the universe, particularly with a mathematical machinery known
as string theory.
The other winners are Andrei Linde, a physicist at Stanford who also worked on cosmic inflation; Alexei Kitaev, a professor of physics at the California Institute of Technology who works on quantum computers; Maxim Kontsevich,
a mathematician at the Institute of Advanced Scientific Studies outside
Paris whose abstract mathematical findings proved useful to physicists
unraveling string theory; and Ashoke Sen, a string theorist at Harish-Chandra Research Institute in India.
Mr. Milner personally selected the inaugural group, but future
recipients of the Fundamental Physics Prize, to be awarded annually,
will be decided by previous winners.
He declined to explain in detail how he selected which accomplishments
to honor or why all of the winners are men. “I truly see this as a
start,” Mr. Milner said. “Going forward, it’s going to be up to the
committee to make those considerations.”
According to the rules, the prize in future years may be split among
multiple winners, and a researcher will be able to win more than once.
Mr. Milner also announced that there would be a $100,000 prize to honor
promising young researchers.
Unlike the Nobel in physics, the Fundamental Physics Prize can be
awarded to scientists whose ideas have not yet been verified by
experiments, which often occurs decades later. Sometimes a radical new
idea “really deserves recognition right away because it expands our
understanding of at least what is possible,” Mr. Milner said.
Dr. Arkani-Hamed, for example, has worked on theories about the origin of the Higgs boson, the particle thought to have been discovered recently at the Large Hadron Collider
in Switzerland, and about how that collider could discover new
dimensions. None of his theories have been proved yet. He said several
were “under strain” because of the new data.
Several of the winners said they hoped that the new prize, with its
large cash award, would help raise recognition of physics and draw more
students into the field. “It’ll be great to have this sort of showcase
for what’s going on in the subject every year,” Dr. Arkani-Hamed said.
The winners said they had not yet decided what to do with their windfall.
“There are some rather mundane things, like paying out the mortgage,”
said Mr. Kitaev, who added that he was thinking about putting some of
the money into education efforts.
“My success is in large part due to good education, my teachers and the
atmosphere of excitement in science when I grew up,” he said. “I might
try to help restore this atmosphere as much as I can.”
Dr. Guth agreed. “I do think prizes like this help put across to the
public that fundamental physics is important, and it’s not just
heavyweight boxing that’s worthy of prizes,” he said.
But he was going to warn his students not to get the wrong idea.
“Certainly, it’s still not a great idea to go into physics for the
money,” he said.
Reblogged via NY Times
He did PhD from abroad, tell me they guy did PhD at IIT won such prize.
ReplyDeleteBala, I think you do not know this, but IITs are known for their bachelors scholars not their Ph. D. scholars, yet.
ReplyDelete