Year
|
Name
|
Institution
|
Citation
|
1953
|
William Shockley
|
Bell Labs
|
|
1954
|
John Bardeen
|
Bell Labs
|
|
1955
|
LeRoy Apker
|
General Electric Research Laboratory
|
|
1956
|
Clifford G. Shull
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
|
|
1957
|
Charles Kittel
|
University of California, Berkeley
|
|
1958
|
Nicolaas Bloembergen
|
Harvard University
|
|
1959
|
Conyers Herring
|
Stanford University
|
|
1960
|
Benjamin Lax
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
|
|
1961
|
Walter Kohn
|
University of California, San Diego
|
|
1962
|
Bertram N. Brockhouse
|
McMaster University
|
|
1963
|
William M. Fairbank
|
Stanford University
|
|
1964
|
Philip W. Anderson
|
Princeton University
|
|
1965
|
Ivar Giaever
|
General Electric Research Laboratory
|
|
1966
|
Theodore H. Maiman
|
Hughes Research Laboratories
|
|
1967
|
Harry G. Drickamer
|
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
|
|
1968
|
J. Robert Schrieffer
|
University of Pennsylvania
|
|
1969
|
J. J. Hopfield
|
Princeton University
|
|
D. G. Thomas
|
Bell Labs
|
|
1970
|
Theodore H. Geballe
|
Stanford University
|
For experiments that challenged theoretical understanding and opened up the technology of high-field superconductors.[1]
|
Bernd T. Matthias
|
University of California, San Diego
|
|
1971
|
Erwin Hahn
|
University of California, Berkeley
|
|
1972
|
James C. Phillips
|
Bell Labs
|
|
1973
|
Gen Shirane
|
Brookhaven National Laboratory
|
|
1974
|
Michael Tinkham
|
Harvard University
|
|
1975
|
Albert W. Overhauser
|
Purdue University
|
|
1976
|
George Feher
|
University of California, San Diego
|
|
1977
|
Leo P. Kadanoff
|
Brown University
|
|
1978
|
George D. Watkins
|
Lehigh University
|
|
1979
|
Marvin Cohen
|
University of California, Berkeley
|
|
1980
|
William E. Spicer
|
Stanford University
|
|
Dean E. Eastman
|
IBM Research
|
|
1981
|
David M. Lee
|
Cornell University
|
|
Robert Coleman Richardson
|
|
Douglas D. Osheroff
|
Bell Labs
|
|
1982
|
Bertrand I. Halperin
|
Harvard University
|
|
1983
|
Alan J. Heeger
|
University of California, Santa Barbara
|
|
1984
|
Daniel C. Tsui
|
Princeton University
|
|
Horst L. Stormer
|
Bell Labs
|
|
Arthur C. Gossard
|
|
1985
|
Robert O. Pohl
|
Cornell University
|
|
1986
|
Robert B. Laughlin
|
Stanford University
|
For his contribution to our understanding of the quantum Hall effect.
|
1987
|
Robert J. Birgeneau
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
|
|
1988
|
Frank F. Fang
|
IBM Research
|
|
Alan B. Fowler
|
|
Phillip J. Stiles
|
Brown University
|
|
1989
|
Hellmut Fritzsche
|
University of Chicago
|
|
1990
|
David Edwards
|
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
|
|
1991
|
Patrick A. Lee
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
|
|
1992
|
Richard A. Webb
|
IBM Research
|
|
1993
|
F. Duncan M. Haldane
|
Princeton University
|
For his contribution to the theory of low-dimensional quantum systems.
|
1994
|
Aron Pinczuk
|
Bell Labs
|
|
1995
|
Rolf Landauer
|
IBM Research
|
For his invention of the scattering theory approach to the analysis and modeling of electronic transport.
|
1996
|
Charles Pence Slichter
|
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
|
For his original and creative applications of the magnetic resonance techniques to elucidate the microscopic properties of condensed matter systems including, especially, superconductors.
|
1997
|
James S. Langer
|
University of California, Santa Barbara
|
For contributions to the theory of the kinetics of phase transitions particularly as applied to nucleation and dendritic growth.
|
1998
|
Dale J. van Harlingen
|
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
|
For using phase-sensitive experiments in the elucidation of the orbital symmetry of the pairing function in high-Tc superconductors.
|
Donald M. Ginsberg
|
John R. Kirtley
|
IBM Research
|
Chang C. Tsuei
|
|
1999
|
Sidney R. Nagel
|
University of Chicago
|
For his innovative studies of disordered systems ranging from structural glasses to granular materials.
|
2000
|
Gerald. J. Dolan
|
Immunicon Corporation
|
For pioneering contributions to single electron effects in mesoscopic systems.
|
Theodore. A. Fulton
|
Bell Labs
|
Marc A. Kastner
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
|
2001
|
Alan Harald Luther
|
Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics
|
For fundamental contribution to the theory of interacting electrons in one dimension.
|
Victor John Emery
|
Brookhaven National Laboratory
|
2002
|
Jainendra Jain
|
Pennsylvania State University
|
For theoretical and experimental work establishing the composite fermion model for the half-filled Landau level and other quantized Hall systems.
|
Nicholas Read
|
Yale University
|
Robert Willett
|
Bell Labs
|
2003
|
Boris Altshuler
|
Princeton University
|
For fundamental contributions to the understanding of the quantum mechanics of electrons in random potentials and confined geometries, including pioneering work on the interplay of interactions and disorder.
|
2004
|
Tom C. Lubensky
|
University of Pennsylvania
|
For seminal contributions to the theory of condensed matter systems including the prediction and elucidation of the properties of new, partially ordered phases of complex materials.
|
David R. Nelson
|
Harvard University
|
2005
|
David Awschalom
|
University of California, Santa Barbara
|
For fundamental contributions to experimental studies of quantum spin dynamics and spin coherence in condensed matter systems.
|
Myriam Sarachik
|
City University of New York
|
Gabriel Aeppli
|
London Center for Nanotechnology
|
2006
|
Noel A. Clark
|
University of Colorado, Boulder
|
For groundbreaking experimental and theoretical contributions to the fundamental science and applications of liquid crystals, particularly their ferroelectric and chiral properties.
|
Robert Meyer
|
Brandeis University
|
2007
|
James P. Eisenstein
|
California Institute of Technology
|
For fundamental experimental and theoretical research on correlated many-electron states in low-dimensional systems.
|
Steven M. Girvin
|
Yale University
|
Allan H. MacDonald
|
University of Texas, Austin
|
2008
|
Mildred Dresselhaus
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
|
For pioneering contributions to the understanding of electronic properties of materials, especially novel forms of carbon.
|
2009
|
Jagadeesh Moodera
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
|
For pioneering work in the field of spin-dependent tunneling and for the application of these phenomena to the field of magnetoelectronics.
|
Paul Tedrow
|
Robert Meservey
|
Terunobu Miyazaki
|
Tohoku University
|
2010
|
Alan L. Mackay
|
Birkbeck College, University of London
|
For pioneering contributions to the theory of quasicrystals, including the prediction of their diffraction pattern.
|
Dov Levine
|
Technion University
|
Paul Steinhardt
|
Princeton University
|
2011
|
Juan Carlos Campuzano
|
Argonne National Laboratory
|
For innovations in angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, which advanced the understanding of the cuprate superconductors, and transformed the study of strongly-correlated electronic systems.
|
Peter Johnson
|
Brookhaven National Laboratory
|
Zhi-Xun Shen
|
Stanford University
|
2012
|
Charles L. Kane
|
University of Pennsylvania
|
For the theoretical prediction and experimental observation of the quantum spin Hall effect, opening the field of topological insulators.
|
Laurens W. Molenkamp
|
University of Würzburg
|
Shoucheng Zhang
|
Stanford University
|
2013
|
John Slonczewski
|
IBM Research
|
For predicting spin-transfer torque and opening the field of current-induced control over magnetic nanostructures.
|
Luc Berger
|
Carnegie Mellon University
|
2014
|
Philip Kim
|
Columbia University
|
For his discoveries of unconventional electronic properties of graphene.
|
2015
|
Aharon Kapitulnik
|
Stanford University
|
For discovery and pioneering investigations of the superconductor-insulator transition, a paradigm for quantum phase transitions.
|
Allen Goldman
|
University of Minnesota
|
Arthur F Hebard
|
University of Florida
|
Matthew P. A. Fisher
|
University of California, Santa Barbara
|