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ICTP Dirac Medal Ceremony 28 August

Three physicists to be honoured for fundamental work in statistical mechanics
ICTP Dirac Medal Ceremony 28 August
ICTP Dirac Medallists 2022 (from left) Joel L. Lebowitz, Elliott H. Lieb and David P. Ruelle.

ICTP will celebrate the scientific achievements of three physicists who received the 2022 Dirac Medal at a ceremony to be held on Monday 28 August starting at 14:00.

The physicists -- Joel L. Lebowitz of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, USA, Elliott H. Lieb of Princeton University, USA, and David P. Ruelle, Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, France -- have received the medal for their important work in the field of statistical mechanics that has very significantly deepened and expanded our mathematical understanding of physical systems in many new directions, sometimes different from the traditional ones. Their major contributions include, among others, the study of non-equilibrium physics and large deviations; the proof of the stability of matter; the analytic solution of two-dimensional models; seminal results in quantum information theory; the definition of Gibbs states for infinite systems; and the analysis of chaos and turbulence. All three scientists were previously awarded the Boltzmann Medal, a prize awarded to physicists who obtain new results concerning statistical mechanics.

The Dirac Medal is usually awarded to scientists that have followed Paul Dirac's footsteps in his belief that applying rigorous mathematics to physics is the best approach to understanding physical systems and their properties. The work of this year's Dirac Medallists reflects this approach: they used a solid mathematical framework based on statistical and probability methods to explain the macroscopic behaviour of the microscopic world of particles. Lebowitz, Lieb and Ruelle have made valuable contributions that have impacted not only the field of statistical mechanics, but that also have had broader influences on other fields of physics such as condensed matter and quantum physics.

The ceremony will be livestreamed at www.ictp.it/livestream.

About the 2022 Dirac Medallists

  • Joel L. Lebowitz is a mathematical physicist widely acknowledged for his outstanding contributions to statistical physics, statistical mechanics and many other fields of mathematics and physics. With an extensive list of scientific publications, Lebowitz has had many important contributions in many fields of physics. His current interests are in problems of non-equilibrium statistical mechanics. Lebowitz has received many top physics honours, including the Boltzmann Medal (1992), the American Physical Society's Nicholson Medal (1994), the Henri Poincaré Prize (2000), the Volterra Award (2001), and the Max Planck Medal (2007).
  • Elliott H. Lieb is a mathematical physicist specialised in statistical mechanics, condensed matter theory, and functional analysis. A prolific author, Lieb particularly produced scientific works pertaining to quantum and classical many-body problems, atomic structure, the stability of matter, functional inequalities, the theory of magnetism, and the Hubbard model. Lieb has been awarded several prestigious prizes in mathematics and physics, including the Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics (1978), the Max Planck Medal (1992), the Boltzmann Medal (1998), the medal of the Erwin Schrödinger Institute for Mathematics and Physics (2021) and the Medal for Exceptional Achievement in Research from the American Physical Society (2022).
  • David P. Ruelle is a mathematical physicist whose work on statistical physics and dynamical systems has made fundamental contributions in various aspects of mathematical physics. One of his most celebrated results, together with F. Takens, opened a new and fundamental vision on the nature of turbulence, a longstanding and challenging problem in non-equilibrium statistical physics . Moreover, due to Ruelle's approach in understanding turbulence, for the first time scientists discovered how complex behaviour could arise generically from simple physical laws. He was awarded the Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics (1985), the Boltzmann Medal (1986) and the Max Planck Medal (2014) for his achievements in theoretical physics.

About the ICTP Dirac Medal

First awarded in 1985, ICTP's Dirac Medal is given in honour of Paul Dirac, one of the greatest physicists of the 20th century and a staunch friend of the Centre. It is awarded every year on Dirac's birthday, 8 August, to scientists who have made significant contributions to theoretical physics. Recipients of ICTP’s Dirac Medal join a list of Medallists comprising the world’s top physicists, many of whom have proceeded to win Nobel Prizes, Fields Medals or Wolf Prizes. An international committee of distinguished scientists selects the winners from a list of nominated candidates. For more details about the prize and a list of past winners, visit the Dirac Medal web page.
 

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