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Wang Yifang
Chinese physicist (born 1963) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Wang Yifang (Chinese: 王贻芳; born February 1963) is a Chinese particle and accelerator physicist. He is director of the Institute of High Energy Physics (IHEP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing and known for contributions to neutrino physics, in particular his leading role (with Kam-Biu Luk) at Daya Bay Reactor Neutrino Experiment to determine the last unknown neutrino mixing angle θ 13 (see neutrino).[1]
After earning his bachelor's degree in physics at Nanjing University (1984) he was with Samuel CC Ting at the L3 experiment the Large Electron-Positron Collider (LEP) of CERN. Wang worked and studied at the University of Florence obtaining PhD in Physics,[2] then worked at Laboratory for Nuclear Science of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and at Stanford University[3] and joined the Institute of High Energy Physics(IHEP), China in 2001 as a researcher and became the Director in 2011.[4]
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Awards and honors
- 2014 Panofsky Prize (shared with Kam-Biu Luk)[4]
- 2015 Member of Chinese Academy of Sciences
- 2016 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics, with Kam-Biu Luk.[5]
- 2016 Member of The World Academy of Sciences[6]
- 2016 and 2020 Asian Scientist 100, Asian Scientist[7]
- 2019 Future Science Prize[8]
- 2022 Fellow of the American Physical Society[9]
- 2024 Foreign associates of the National Academy of Sciences[10]
- 2025 Foreign Member of the Royal Society[11]
Since 2014 Wang has been Director of the Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO) in Southern China leading the experiment in an effect to determine the neutrino mass hierarchy with neutrinos from nuclear reactors.[4]
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References
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