Institute of Physics Michael Faraday Medal and Prize
The Michael Faraday Medal and Prize is a gold medal awarded annually by the Institute of Physics in experimental physics.[1] The award is made "for outstanding and sustained contributions to experimental physics." The medal is accompanied by a prize of £1000 and a certificate.[2]

Michael Faraday
(1791 - 1867)
(1791 - 1867)
| Institute of Physics Michael Faraday Medal & Prize | |
|---|---|
| Awarded for | Outstanding contributions to experimental physics | 
| Sponsored by | Institute of Physics | 
| Country | |
| Presented by | Institute of Physics  | 
| Formerly called | Guthrie Medal and Prize | 
| Reward(s) | Gold medal, £1000 | 
| First awarded | 1914 | 
| Website | Official website | 
Historical development
    
- 1914-1965 Guthrie Lecture initiated to remember Frederick Guthrie,[3] founder of the Physical Society (which merged with the Institute of Physics in 1960).
 - 1966-2007 Guthrie Medal and Prize (in response to changed conditions from when the lecture was first established). From 1992, it became one of the Institute's Premier Awards.
 - 2008–present Michael Faraday Medal and Prize
 
Medalists and lecturers
    
    Faraday medalists
    
- 2022 Nikolay Zheludev, "For international leadership, discoveries and in-depth studies of new phenomena and functionalities in photonic nanostructures and nanostructured matter."
 - 2021 Bucker Dangor, "For outstanding contributions to experimental plasma physics, and in particular for his role in the development of the field of laser-plasma acceleration."
 - 2020 Richard Ellis, "For over 35 years of pioneering contributions in faint-object astronomy, often with instruments he funded and constructed, which have opened up the early universe to direct observations."
 - 2019 Roy Taylor, "For his extensive, internationally leading contributions to the development of spectrally diverse, ultrafast-laser sources and pioneering fundamental studies of nonlinear fibre optics that have translated to scientific and commercial application."[4]
 - 2018 Jennifer Thomas, "For her outstanding investigations into the physics of neutrino oscillations, in particular her leadership of the MINOS/MINOS+ long-baseline neutrino oscillation experiment."[5][6][7]
 - 2017 Jeremy Baumberg, "For his investigations of many ingenious nanostructures supporting novel and precisely engineered plasmonic phenomena relevant to single molecule and atom dynamics, Raman spectroscopies and metamaterials applications."[8]
 - 2016 Jenny Nelson," For her pioneering advances in the science of nanostructured and molecular semiconductor materials "
 - 2015 Henning Sirringhaus, "For transforming our knowledge of charge transport phenomena in organic semiconductors as well as our ability to exploit them"[9]
 - 2014 Alexander Giles Davies and Edmund Linfield, "For their outstanding and sustained contributions to the physics and technology of the far-infrared (terahertz) frequency region of the electromagnetic spectrum"[10][11][12]
 - 2013 Edward Hinds, "For his innovative and seminal experimental investigations into ultra-cold atoms and molecules"
 - 2012 Roy Sambles, "For his pioneering research in experimental condensed matter physics"
 - 2011 Alan Andrew Watson, "For his outstanding leadership within the Pierre Auger Observatory, and the insights he has provided to the origin and nature of ultra high energy cosmic rays"[13]
 - 2010 Athene Donald, "For her many highly original studies of the structures and behaviour of polymers both synthetic and natural"
 - 2009 Donal Bradley, "For his pioneering work in the field of 'plastic electronics'"
 - 2008 Roger Cowley, "For pioneering work in the development and application of neutron and X-ray scattering techniques to the physics of a wide range of important solid and liquid-state systems"
 
Guthrie medalists
    
- 2007 Gilbert Lonzarich, "for his experimental and theoretical contributions to condensed matter physics"
 - 2006 Marshall Stoneham, "for his wide-ranging theoretical work on defects in solids"
 - 2005 William Frank Vinen, "for his outstanding contributions to superfluids and superconductors"
 - 2004 Henry Hall
 - 2003 Michael Springford
 - 2002 Penelope Jane Brown
 - 2001 Laurence Eaves
 - 2000 Lawrence Michael Brown
 - 1999 George Bacon
 - 1998 Derek Charles Robinson
 - 1997 John Evan Baldwin
 - 1996 Edward Roy Pike
 - 1995 John Enderby
 - 1994 Philip George Burke
 - 1993 Tom Kibble
 - 1992 Archibald Howie
 - 1991 Dennis William Sciama
 - 1990 Roger James Elliott
 - 1989 Martin J. Rees
 - 1988 Alan Lidiard
 - 1987 Samuel Frederick Edwards
 - 1986 Denys Haigh Wilkinson
 - 1985 Michael Pepper
 - 1984 Michael John Seaton
 - 1983 Jeffrey Goldstone
 - 1982 Frederick Charles Frank
 - 1981 John Clive Ward
 - 1980 Michael Ellis Fisher
 - 1979 Donald Hill Perkins
 - 1978 Philip Warren Anderson
 - 1977 Alan Howard Cottrell
 - 1976 Abdus Salam
 - 1975 David Tabor
 - 1974 Rudolf Ludwig Mössbauer
 - 1973 Hermann Bondi
 - 1972 Brian David Josephson
 - 1971 John Ashworth Ratcliffe
 - 1970 Alfred Brian Pippard
 - 1969 Cecil Frank Powell
 - 1968 Rudolf Ernst Peierls
 - 1967 James Chadwick
 - 1966 William Cochran
 
Guthrie lecturers
    
- 1965 John Bertram Adams
 - 1964 Martin Ryle
 - 1963 Leslie Fleetwood Bates
 - 1962 Alfred Charles Bernard Lovell[14]
 - 1961 David Shoenberg
 - 1960 Fred Hoyle
 - 1959 Harrie Stewart Wilson Massey
 - 1958 Willis Eugene Lamb
 - 1957 Harold C Urey
 - 1956 Francis Simon
 - 1955 Edmund Clifton Stoner
 - 1954 Geoffrey Taylor
 - 1953 Max Born
 - 1952 W Lawrence Bragg
 - 1951 Nevill Francis Mott
 - 1950 George Ingle Finch
 - 1949 Alexander Oliver Rankine
 - 1948 George Paget Thomson
 - 1947 John Desmond Bernal
 - 1946 Max Jakob
 - 1945 Arturo Duperier: "The Geophysical Aspect of Cosmic Rays"[15]
 - 1944 Joel H Hildebrand
 - 1943 Edward T. Whittaker: "Chance, freewill and necessity, in the scientific conception of the universe"[16]
 - 1942 Edward V Appleton
 - 1941 Edward Neville da Costa Andrade
 - 1940 Patrick Maynard Stuart Blackett: "Cosmic Rays: Recent Developments"[17]
 - 1939 (no lecture)
 - 1938 Archibald Vivian Hill: "The transformations of energy and the mechanical work of muscles"[18]
 - 1937 Clifford Copland Paterson
 - 1936 Frederick A. Lindemann: "Physical Ultimates"[19]
 - 1935 Arthur Holly Compton: "An attempt to analyse Cosmic Rays"
 - 1934 Charles Vernon Boys: "My recent progress in Gas Calorimetry"
 - 1933 Karl Manne Georg Siegbahn
 - 1932 Max Planck
 - 1931 Richard T Glazebrook
 - 1930 Peter Debye
 - 1929 Percy Williams Bridgman
 - 1928 J. J. Thomson
 - 1927 Sir Ernest Rutherford: "Atomic nuclei and their transformations"[20]
 - 1926 Charles Fabry
 - 1925 Wilhelm Wien
 - 1924 Maurice le Duc de Broglie
 - 1923 James Hopwood Jeans
 - 1922 Niels Bohr: "The Effect of Electric and Magnetic Fields on Spectral Lines"[21]
 
- 1921 Albert Abraham Michelson: "Some Recent Applications of Interference Methods"[22]
 - 1920 Charles Edouarde Guillaume: "The Anomaly of Nickel-Steels"[23]
 - 1919 (no lecture)
 - 1918 John Cunningham McLennan: "The Origin of Spectra"[24]
 - 1917 Paul Langevin
 - 1916 William Bate Hardy: "Some Problems of Living Matter"[25]
 - 1915 (no lecture)
 - 1914 Robert Williams Wood: "Radiation of Gas Molecules Excited by Light"[26]
 
External links
    
    
See also
    
    
References
    
-  "Gold medals". Institute of Physics. 
The Faraday medal: Awarded for outstanding and sustained contributions to experimental physics, to a physicist of international reputation
 - "Michael Faraday Medal and Prize". Institute of Physics. Retrieved 2018-04-04.
 - G. Carey-Foster (1913). "Introduction to the First Guthrie Lecture". Proceedings of the Physical Society of London. 26: 183–184. doi:10.1088/1478-7814/26/1/322.
 - "Comet chasing and Animal AI: News from the College". www.myscience.uk. 5 July 2019.
 - "Medals for SuperNEMO collaborators". SuperNEMO Collaboration. 21 November 2018.
 - "Three UCL academics recognised with prestigious physics prizes". UCL News. July 11, 2018.
 - "IOP award winners for 2018 announced" (PDF). CERN Courier. No. September 2018. p. 67.
 - "Jeremy Baumberg awarded the 2017 IOP Michael Faraday Medal and Prize — Department of Physics". University of Cambridge. 3 July 2017.
 - Quested, Tony (10 July 2015). "Transformational Sirringhaus wins Faraday Medal". Business Weekly.
 - Bunting, Christopher. "Terahertz researchers win Faraday Medal". www.leeds.ac.uk.
 - "The Faraday Medal-2014 has found its heroes in terahertz field". TeraSense Group. 21 August 2014.
 - "University of Leeds terahertz researchers win 2014 Faraday Award". Laser Focus World. 3 July 2014.
 - "Fellow wins IoP Faraday Medal". Astronomy & Geophysics. 52 (5): 5.39. October 1, 2011. doi:10.1111/j.1468-4004.2011.52539_3.x.
 - A. C. B. Lovell (1963). "1962 Guthrie Lecture: The Physical Basis of the Research Programmes at Jodrell Bank". Proceedings of the Physical Society of London. 81 (3): 385–411. Bibcode:1963PPS....81..385L. doi:10.1088/0370-1328/81/3/301.
 - A. Duperier (1945). "The Geophysical Aspect of Cosmic Rays". Proceedings of the Physical Society. 57 (6): 464–477. Bibcode:1945PPS....57..464D. doi:10.1088/0959-5309/57/6/302.
 - E.T. Whittaker (1943). "Chance, freewill and necessity, in the scientific conception of the universe". Proceedings of the Physical Society. 55 (6): 459–471. Bibcode:1943PPS....55..459W. doi:10.1088/0959-5309/55/6/303.
 - P.M.S. Blackett (1941). "Cosmic Rays: Recent Developments". Proceedings of the Physical Society. 53 (3): 203–213. Bibcode:1941PPS....53..203B. doi:10.1088/0959-5309/53/3/301.
 - A.V. Hill (1939). "The transformations of energy and the mechanical work of muscles". Proceedings of the Physical Society. 51 (1): 1–18. Bibcode:1939PPS....51....1H. doi:10.1088/0959-5309/51/1/302. ISSN 0959-5309.
 - "Guthrie Lecture: Prof. F. A. Lindemann, F.R.S". Nature. 137 (3472): 809. 1936. Bibcode:1936Natur.137S.809.. doi:10.1038/137809c0.
 - Ernest Rutherford (1926). "Atomic nuclei and their transformations". Proceedings of the Physical Society. 39 (1): 359–371. Bibcode:1926PPS....39..359R. doi:10.1088/0959-5309/39/1/332.
 - N. Bohr (1922). "The Effect of Electric and Magnetic Fields on Spectral Lines". Proceedings of the Physical Society of London. 35 (1): 275–302. Bibcode:1922PPSL...35..275B. doi:10.1088/1478-7814/35/1/342.
 - A.A. Michelson (1920). "Some Recent Applications of Interference Methods". Proceedings of the Physical Society of London. 33 (1): 275–285. Bibcode:1920PPSL...33..275M. doi:10.1088/1478-7814/33/1/328.
 - Charles Edouard Guillaume (1919). "The Anomaly of the Nickel-Steels". Proceedings of the Physical Society of London. 32 (1): 374–404. Bibcode:1919PPSL...32..374E. doi:10.1088/1478-7814/32/1/337. ISSN 1478-7814.
 - J.C. McLennan (1918). "The Origin of Spectra". Proceedings of the Physical Society of London. 31 (1): 1–29. Bibcode:1918PPSL...31....1M. doi:10.1088/1478-7814/31/1/301.
 - W.B. Hardy (1915). "Some Problems of Living Matter". Proceedings of the Physical Society of London. 28 (1): 99–118. Bibcode:1915PPSL...28...99H. doi:10.1088/1478-7814/28/1/312.
 - R. W. Wood (1913). "Radiation of Gas Molecules Excited by Light". Proceedings of the Physical Society of London. 26 (1): 374–404. Bibcode:1913PPSL...26..185W. doi:10.1088/1478-7814/26/1/323. S2CID 33165912.
 
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