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Physics Nobel winners include first female laureate for 55 years

Alongside Donna Strickland, Arthur Ashkin breaks record for becoming oldest laureate at 96

Published on
October 2, 2018
Last updated
October 2, 2018

The 2018 Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to a woman for the first time in more than half a century.

Donna Strickland, associate professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Waterloo, has been acknowledged for her contributions towards 鈥済roundbreaking inventions in the field of laser physics鈥.

She is only the third female scientist to be honoured, alongside Marie Curie, who won the physics prize in 1903, and Maria Goeppoert-Mayer, who won it in 1963.

Professor Strickland told the audience聽about the need 鈥渢o celebrate women physicists鈥. 鈥淲e鈥檙e out there, and hopefully in time it鈥檒l start to move forward at a faster rate. I鈥檓 honoured to be one of those women,鈥 she added.

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Her comments come in the wake of a public row聽about the role of women in physics involving a senior scientist at Cern. At an event organised by the European research centre last week, Alessandro Strumia, a professor from Pisa University working with Cern, said that 鈥減hysics was invented and built by men, it鈥檚 not by invitation鈥.聽Cern representatives聽have since condemned Professor Strumia's聽speech聽as 鈥渉ighly offensive鈥.

Dr Strickland shares the award with her research partner G茅rard Mourou, professor emeritus at the University of Michigan, and Arthur Ashkin, formerly of Bell Laboratories, who has broken the record for the oldest person to win a Nobel prize at the age of 96.

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Dr Ashkin is recognised for his invention of 鈥渙ptical tweezers鈥, which can be used to extract particles, atoms, viruses and other living cells from complex biological systems. The invention works by using radiation pressure to trap and manipulate particles without damaging them.

Making their announcement from a prize ceremony in Stockholm, the Nobel committee said the invention had 鈥渙pened up a new window鈥 for science. 鈥淗is groundbreaking invention was before its time,鈥 they added. 鈥淚ts potential would be explored with subsequent improvements to the supporting technologies for optical tweezers, as well as the development of a surrounding array of methods that might be used in tandem with them.鈥

Dr Strickland and Dr Mourou are recognised for their discovery of a new way of generating short but high-intensity laser pulses, which can be used within a range of practical applications聽such as laser eye surgery.

A previous invention 鈥 awarded the Nobel Prize in 1999 鈥 was said to match the timescale for atomic motion in molecules,聽enabling scientists to study transition states in chemical reactions in real time. By contorting these pre-existing laser patterns, however, Dr Strickland and Dr Mourou were able to amplify each laser pulse without damaging it.

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鈥淭he invention鈥f the chirped pulse amplification (CPA) technique has opened many avenues for researchers both in basic and applied science, resulting in beneficial applications,鈥 the committee said. 鈥淓xpanding the frontiers of CPA is an ongoing endeavour.鈥

Laureates win SKr 9 million (拢775,000), with one half going to Dr Ashkin and the other half shared between Dr Strickland and Dr Mourou.

rachael.pells@timeshighereducation.com

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