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SPIE Gold Medal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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SPIE Gold Medal, or Gold Medal Award of SPIE, is the highest honor of SPIE (the international society for optics and photonics), and is considered one of the highest award[by whom?] in the fields of photonic and optical engineering and related instrumental sciences. The Gold Medal started awarding annually since 1977, and the award includes a medal and $10,000 cash award.[1]
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Past awardees
- 1977: John Donovan Strong
- 1978: James G. Baker
- 1979: Edwin H. Land
- 1980: Rudolf Kingslake
- 1981: Harold E. Edgerton
- 1982: Harold H. Hopkins
- 1983: Robert E. Hopkins
- 1984: Franke Cooke
- 1985: Warren J. Smith
- 1986: Brian J. Thompson
- 1987: H. Angus Macleod
- 1988: Andrew Tescher
- 1989: Andre Marechal
- 1990: Emmett N. Leith
- 1991: William F. Schreiber
- 1992: Charles K. Kao
- 1993: Alfred H. Sommer
- 1994: Andrei L. Mikaelian
- 1995: Georges Nomarski
- 1996: Robert R. Shannon
- 1997: Marjorie Meinel and Aden Meinel
- 1998: Thomas I. Harris
- 1999: William L. Wolfe
- 2000: Robert E. Fischer
- 2001: Parameswaran Hariharan
- 2002: Zhores I. Alferov
- 2003: James C. Wyant
- 2004: Roland V. Shack
- 2005: H. John Caulfield
- 2006: Duncan T. Moore
- 2007: Joseph W. Goodman
- 2008: M. J. Soileau
- 2009: Richard B. Hoover
- 2010: Charles H. Townes
- 2011: Harrison Hooker Barrett
- 2012: Daniel Malacara Hernandez
- 2013: Federico Capasso
- 2014: James Harrington
- 2015: Nader Engheta
- 2016: Paras N. Prasad
- 2017: Katarina Svanberg
- 2018: Paul Corkum[2]
- 2019: Robert Alfano
- 2020: Ursula Keller
- 2021: Hugo Thienpont
- 2022: Michael Berns[3]
- 2023: Graham Reed[4]
- 2024: Akhlesh Lakhtakia[5]
- 2025: Halina Rubinsztein-Dunlop
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See also
References
External links
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