2003 - Prof. M. Frederick Hawthorne-

Professor M. Fredrick Hawthorne

 

Frederick Hawthorne received his B.A. in chemistry from Pomona College in Claremont, CA in 1949, and a Ph.D. in organic chemistry from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) 1953, followed by post-doctoral research in physical-organic chemistry at Iowa State University, Ames. In 1954, he joined the Redstone Arsenal Research Division of the Rohm and Haas Company in Huntsville, Alabama, as a senior research chemist. In 1960, he became a visiting lecturer in Physical-Organic Chemistry at Harvard University, and later returned to Rohm and Haas to become a Director of the company’s laboratories in Philadelphia. He became a full professor of chemistry at the University of California, Riverside in 1962. He returned to UCLA in 1969 as Professor of Inorganic Chemistry, and was later named the University Professor of Chemistry.

Professor Hawthorne was the principal originator of the field of polyhedral borane chemistry. He conceived and carried out the fusion of transition metals with carborane clusters. This led to the discovery of the huge fields of metallacarborane and metalloborane chemistry. He also sought and found homogeneous metallacarborane catalysts and new organometallic reactions characteristic of borane clusters, and produced boron-labeled biomolecules as target compounds in the boron neutron capture therapy of cancer. Most recently, carboranes and polyhedral boranes are being developed as molecular manifolds for drug delivery, as pharmacophores groups in drug design and as components of molecular electronic devices and nanomachines.

Professor Hawthorne was the author or co-author of around 550 research papers, 30 patents and 10 book chapters. He trained 211 Ph.D. students and postdoctoral associates from 21 different countries. Hawthorne’s distinguished research career has been heralded by a long list of other national and international awards and honors, including numerous prizes, medals, honorary degrees, awards, lectureships, fellowships of national and international scientific academies, and membership of learned societies and editorial boards. Professor Hawthorne served for more than 30 years as editor of Inorganic Chemistry. He was also a member of the Editorial Advisory Board of Bioconjugate Chemistry.

This biography was written in the year the prize was awarded.

2002 - Prof. Peter Shor-

Professor Peter W. Shor

 

Peter Shor received his bachelor’s degree in mathematics from California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in Pasadena in 1981, a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1985, followed by post-doctoral training at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1986, he joined AT&T Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey, and moved, in 1996, to AT&T laboratories in Florham Park, New Jersey.

Professor Shor is most famous for his work on quantum computation, particularly for devising a quantum algorithm, now known as Shor’s Algorithm, for factoring faster than the fastest known algorithm running on a digital computer. Shor’s algorithm uses a number of steps that grow only polynomially in the size of the instance, for example, the number of digits in the number to be factored. He thus made the physical development of quantum computers (hypothetical machines of which only small prototypes have so far been built) more feasible by showing that errors in the computation need not inevitably disrupt the operations of a quantum computer – he exhibited quantum correcting codes, which could be used to build a quantum computer out of slightly noisy components.

Professor Shor was awarded the Rolf Nevanlinna Prize from the International Congress of Mathematicians, the Dickson Prize in Science, the International Quantum Communication Award and the Gödel Prize for best paper in theoretical computer science. In 1999, he was awarded the MacArthur fellowship (nicknamed “Genius Fellowship”), which is awarded annually by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to US citizens and residents of any age and field of research “who show exceptional merit and promise for continued and enhanced creative work.”

This biography was written in the year the prize was awarded.

2002 - Prof. Yuri Manin-

Professor Yuri I. Manin

 

Yuri Manin received his M.Sc. in mathematics from Moscow University and a Ph.D. and Habilitation from the Steklov Mathematical Institute of the Academy of Sciences in Moscow. He served as a professor of Mathematics at Moscow University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and as a Visiting Professor at Columbia University. In 1993, he was appointed Director of the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in Bonn.

Professor Manin is one of the most influential mathematicians, with broad research interests covering algebra, geometry, number theory, theoretical computer science and mathematical physics. He published his first paper during his undergraduate years. His earlier achievements also include proof of the Model conjecture, introduction of the Gauss-Manin Connection, a vital tool in modern algebraic geometry, and disproof of the Luroth problem (jointly with Iskoviskih). In the theory of number, he discovered certain constraints known as Brauer-Manin Obstruction to the existence of rational solutions to Diophantine equations. He also launched a program to study algebraic manifolds and carried out – with his students – widely recognized work on error-correcting codes algorithms. From the late 1970s, he turned his attention to the application of algebraic geometry to mathematical physics, and made significant advances in quantum field theory and quantum string theory. More recently, he contributed to the development of a mathematical theory of quantum homology. He authored 14 books and more than 200 scientific papers in prestigious journals, and mentored numerous students from around the world. Professor Manin’s intellectual pursuit extends beyond mathematics; he published research and expository papers in literature, mythology, semiotics, physics, linguistics, glotto-genesis, history of culture, and philosophy of science.

Professor Manin’s outstanding contributions to both mathematics and physics were recognized by numerous prestigious prizes, medals, honorary doctorate degrees, fellowships of major scientific academies and Institutes, honorary lectureships and editorships of major mathematical journals.

This biography was written in the year the prize was awarded.

2001 - Prof. Chen Ning Yang-

Professor Chen Ning Yang

 

Chen Nin Yang obtained his B.Sc. at the National Southwest Associated University in Kunming, and an M.Sc. in Physics at Tsinghua University, China, and a Ph.D. at the University of Chicago, where he also served as instructor in 1948. The following year, Yang joined the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton University in New Jersey, becoming a full professor six years later. In 1965, he took the position of Albert Einstein Professor and Director of the newly founded Institute of Theoretical Physics at the State University of New York in Stoneybrook (SUNY). Following his retirement in 1999, he was appointed an Albert Einstein Professor Emeritus and an Honorary Director of the Institute of Theoretical Physics at SUNY, and a Distinguished Professor At-Large at the Chinese University in Hong Kong. He is currently an honorary director of Tsinghua University, Beijing, where he is the Huang Jibei-Lu Kaiqun professor at the Center for Advanced Studies.

Professor Yang is a renowned theoretical physicist whose research with Tsung-Dao Lee showed that the law of parity symmetry between physical phenomena occurring in right-handed and left-handed coordinate systems is violated during the decay of certain elementary particles. Prior to that, it was assumed that parity symmetry was a universal law in physics. This and other studies in particle physics earned Yang and Lee the Nobel Prize in 1957. Yang’s subsequent work with Robert Mills on the non-Abelian gauge theory (also known as Quantum Yang-Mills theory) laid the foundation for the unification of all interactions in nature. It is this latter work that was recognized by the King Faisal International Prize for Science. Yang also made fundamental contributions to statistical mechanics and the theory of quantum fluids.

Professor Yang’s profoundly deep contributions to the principles of theoretical physics were recognized by numerous other prestigious awards and honors, 18 honorary degrees, and honorary fellowships of leading international scientific academies and societies worldwide. In 1986, he received the National Science Medal, the highest American distinction in science, from the President of the USA. He was also elected Fellow of the prestigious Royal Society in London.

This biography was written in the year the prize was awarded.

2001 - Prof. Sajeev O. John-

Professor Sajeev O. John

 

Sajeev John obtained his B.S. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Ph.D. in Physics from Harvard University. He then received post-doctoral training at the University of Pennsylvania. During his stay in the United States, he served at Exxon Research and Engineering Laboratories, Princeton University and Bell Communications Research Laboratories. In 1989, he joined the University of Toronto, where he became a Professor of Physics in 1992 and a Principal Investigator for Photonics Research Ontario.

Professor John’s main research involves three areas: light localization and photonic bands, high temperature superconductivity, and multiple light scattering spectroscopy. He played a major role in the discovery and elucidation of the fundamental principles of photonic band gap materials and was the driving force behind research which involves the processing of information by optical means. Photonic gap materials are dielectric materials capable of trapping light, thus providing photonic analogs of semiconductors. This new technology could lead to the development of optical microchips where light instead of electricity moves through tiny circuits. If this technology can be mass produced, it will be a major technological advance since information will be processed at the speed of light, allowing smaller and faster communication devices to be built. John’s other research interests include medical imaging and high-temperature superconductivity. He is also developing a microscopic theory of the superconducting phase of high temperature cuprate superconductors. If successful, it could lead to the fabrication of superconducting materials that operate at room temperature.

Professor John received several awards and honors including the Herzberg Medal for Physics, Steacie Prize, and the Humboldt Senior Scientist Award. He is also the recipient of the McLean Fellowship from the University of Toronto, the Killman Research Fellowship from the Canada Council, the Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Fellowship from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.

This biography was written in the year the prize was awarded.

2000 - Prof. J. Craig Venter-

Professor John Craig Venter

 

John Venter began his formal education at a community college in California, where he proceeded to obtain a B.A. in Biochemistry and a Ph.D. in Physiology and Pharmacology from the University of California, San Diego. In 1976, he started teaching at the Colleges of Medicine and Dentistry at the State University of New York (SUNY), where he rose to the rank of research professor in 1984. Between 1984-1992, he joined the National Institutes of Health (NIH), in Bethesda, Maryland, where he directed the Receptor Biochemistry and Molecular Biology laboratories. In 1992, he founded the Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR), a non-profit research institute. 

Professor Venter is a world authority on genomic sequencing. He was the first to put high throughput automated DNA sequencing into practice, and the first to develop the highly efficient expressed sequence tags (EST) method for developing whole genome random sequencing strategy for rapidly decoding entire organismal genomes. The EST has fundamentally altered the process of gene discovery worldwide and greatly accelerated the discovery of human genes. Using the whole genome shotgun, Venter sequenced the first genome of a free-living organism, the bacterium Haemophilus influenzae. This landmark achievement was soon followed by the sequencing of entire genomes of other organisms, and was key to the subsequent success in sequencing the human genome. Using DNA from 5 human volunteers, including himself, Venter generated the human genome sequence. In 2000, he and rival scientist Francis Collins of the NIH, along with the U.S. President Bill Clinton made the stunning announcement of the mapping of the human genome; Venter and Collins then shared the Biography of the Year award.

Professor Venter published hundreds of scientific papers in prestigious journals. He also received several awards and honors from academic, industrial, and biotechnology groups, as well honorary doctorate degrees and invited lectureships. He was also the subject of articles in several magazines as well as documentary television series.

This biography was written in the year the prize was awarded.

2000 - Prof. Edward O. Wilson-

Professor Edward O.Wilson

 

Edward Wilson earned his B.S. in 1949, M.S. in 1950 from the University of Alabama, and his Ph.D. in 1955 from Harvard University. He served as a Professor at Harvard University from 1956, where he took on several distinguished positions. He was a Research Professor of Entomology at Pellegrino University, an Honorary Curator in Entomology at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard, and a Fellow of the Committee for Skeptical Enquiry.

Often known as Dr. Ant, Professor Wilson developed his profound interest in nature as a child. At the age of 13, he discovered the first ever colony of fire ants in the United States, invaders from South America. Drawing from his profound knowledge of these earth’s “little creatures,” he wrote what is probably his most important book, The Diversity of Life, in which he describes how an intricately interconnected natural system is threatened by a man-made biodiversity crisis he calls the “sixth extinction.” His most recent work focuses on the impact of human activity on life on earth.

Professor Wilson’s unequaled contributions extend to the fields of ecology, systematic, conservational, and behavioral biology, biogeography and ethical philosophy. He was the founder of the modern biodiversity movement and the father of sociobiology, a field that seeks to uncover the biological basis of human and animal behavior. The two most widely accepted concepts in ecology on which much basic and applied research rests are those of the r-K selection and island biodiversity. Both concepts were proposed by Wilson with the late Robert McArthur of Princeton University. The first concept is pivotal in evolutionary biology, while the second is the basis for all work on conservation and biodiversity.

Professor Wilson’s overall contribution represents an ambitious attempt to bring together, within a single conceptual framework, the various fields of knowledge from the natural sciences through the social sciences, to the humanities and arts. He authored and co-authored over 400 scientific articles, 20 books, and edited 6 other books. Five of his articles and books were identified as classic citations.

Professor Wilson was one of the most accomplished biologists and the most celebrated intellectuals of the 20th century. He received over 100 prestigious awards including the Crafood Medal of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the Benjamin Franklin Medal of the American Philosophical Society, and the US National Medal of Science. He has also been awarded several honorary doctoral degrees and Honorary Fellowships of nearly all prestigious science academies and societies worldwide. Two of his books won the renowned Pulitzer prize for nonfiction.

In 1995, Time magazine named Professor Wilson as one of the 25 most influential Americans, in 2000 both Time and Audubon magazines named him one of the century’s 100 leading environmentalists.

This biography was written in the year the prize was awarded.

1999 - Prof. Dieter Seebach-

Professor Dieter Seebach

 

Dieter Seebach received his B.Sc. and Ph.D. in chemistry at Karlsruhe University, followed by a postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard University, and a Habilitation at Karlsruhe University. He served as a lecturer at Harvard during his postdoctoral research. After his habilitation, he became a professor of organic chemistry at the Justus Liebig Giessen University. In 1977, he was appointed as a professor at the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule (ETH or Swiss Federal Institute) in Zurich, Switzerland.

Professor Seebach is a giant of contemporary organic chemistry. His work dramatically influenced the progress of organic synthesis, and resulted in over 800 publications, over 20 patents, over 950 invited lectures, and numerous scientific awards. Seebach’s milestone contributions to the progress of organic chemistry include the development of novel synthetic methods, elucidation of the structure and function of biomolecular β-hydroxyalkanoates, and the discovery of unusual β-peptides capable of undergoing diverse and stable secondary structures, which may have valuable applications in bioavailable drug candidates. Seebach supervised around 150 Ph.D. students and more than 100 postdoctoral fellows and was an invited professor at several prestigious universities.

Professor Seebach received many awards and honors, including an honorary doctorate degree from the University of Montpellier in France; he was also a recipient of fellowships and memberships from major scientific academies and societies. He is also a member of the editorial boards of several prestigious chemistry journals.

This biography was written in the year the prize was awarded.

1999 - Prof. Ryoji Noyori-

Professor Ryoji Noyori

 

Ryoji Noyori obtained his B.A. in Chemistry, as well as an M.A. and a Ph.D. in Industrial Chemistry from the College of Engineering at Kyoto University in Japan, followed by a postdoctoral training at Harvard University. Noyori’s academic career spans more than 40 years. He served as a Professor of Chemistry at Nagoya University from 1972, and as Dean of the Graduate School of Science from 1997. He also served as a Professor at Kyushu University between 1993-1996. He is also a Member of the Scientific Council of the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology; Scientific Advisor of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science; former President of the Society of Synthetic Organic Chemistry; and former Director of the ERATO Molecular Catalysis Project of the Research Development Corporation of Japan.

Professor Noyori received many awards and honors, including the Chemical Society of Japan Award, the Japan Academy Prize, the Roger Adams Award, and an honorary doctorate degree from Technische Universität München in Germany. He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, an Honorary Member of the Chemical Society of Japan, and a Member of the American Chemical Society and the Royal Society of Chemistry.

This biography was written in the year the prize was awarded.

1985 -Prof. R. Palmer Beasley-

Professor R. Palmer Beasley

Robert Beasley earned his undergraduate degree from Dartmouth College, his M.D. from Harvard Medical School, and a master’s degree in preventive medicine from the University of Washington in Seattle in 1969. He was a Fellow of the American Epidemiological Society and the American Public Health Association. Beasley worked for more than 20 years as a Professor of Preventive Medicine at the University of Washington in Seattle. He worked as the Director of the American University Medical Center in Taiwan since 1979 and as a professor at the Department of Epidemiology in Washington University since 1981.

Professor Beasley’s academic and educational accomplishments in the field of public health, as well as his scientific contributions to society, were enormous. During his over 20-year career as an epidemiologist, he worked on a variety of epidemiological problems, including HIV/AIDS, plague, rubella, rheumatoid arthritis, and Waardenberg syndrome. However, he was most renowned for his seminal research into the epidemiology of Hepatitis B in China. His relentless pursuit to unlock the deadly mystery posed by the hepatitis B virus resulted in many important discoveries, including mother to infant transmission of the virus, protecting infants with immunoglobulins and vaccines, proving that the hepatitis B virus is a major cause of primary liver cancer, and establishing an effective vaccine to prevent it, which the WHO recognized as the first anti-cancer vaccine. Further advocacy for the vaccine resulted in the global Hepatitis B immunization program.

Professor Beasley published numerous scientific papers and had a long list of invited lectureships. His scientific accomplishments had earned him several prestigious international awards.

 

This biography was written in the year the prize was awarded.